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A close-up on the dictionary definition of happiness.
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PANAMA - OCTOBER 6. In July 2009, the Panama Canal Authority awarded contracts to a consortium of companies to build six new locks by 2015. The narrow canal seen from a ship. October 6, 2010, Panama - stock photo
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When you think of how happy people in a whole country are, what do you take into account? True, country well-being and perception of own happiness depend greatly on the economic situation. But it’s Panama that tops Gallup’s Global Well-being Index.
The Gallup-Healthways index, released for the year 2013, puts the Latin American country at number one, with war-torn Syria and Afghanistan coming in last in a survey of 135 countries.The international survey, entitled The State of Global Well-being, conducted more than 133,000 interviews across the world, coming up with its ‘inaugural report’. It contained country and regional rankings, well-being profiles of countries, industry perspectives on well-being improvement and recommendations for said improvement.
The index, which encompasses the above survey, features a total of six years’ work and over 2 million interviews conducted.

Schoolchildren take part in a parade to commemorate Costa Rica's Independence Day in San Jose (Reuters / Juan Carlos Ulate)




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Panama may be the happiest country in the world, racking up the highest score in the Gallup-Healthways Global Well-Being Index for 2013.

In contrast, conflict-afflicted countries such as Syria and Afghanistan showed the lowest scores in this survey of 135 countries. The United States came in at number 14 in the poll.

The Global Well-Being Index aims to gauge people's perceptions of their well-being, by looking at financial status as well as four other factors that contribute to well-being: social well-being, which means having supportive relationships and love in life; community well-being, which is about liking one's place of residence; having purpose and goals; and physical health.




A Panamanian boy kicks a football near the water in the Panama Bay with the Panama City skyline (AFP Photo / Yuri Cortez) As Gallup-Healthways explains, “Globally, higher well-being correlates with outcomes indicative of stability and resilience — for example, healthcare utilization, intent to migrate, trust in elections and local institutions, daily stress, food/shelter security, volunteerism and willingness to help strangers.”
The survey essentially gauged own perceptions of well-being and four other factors that contribute to it: social well-being, community well-being (measuring whether an individual likes where they live), the presence of purpose and physical health.
It turns out that, sadly, only one in six adults scored high marks in three of the above categories, with the pervasive mood being one of ‘struggling’ and ‘suffering’ across the board, according to the researchers.
In another surprising twist, the US and Russia end up close together: Russia comes in at 16, with America taking number 14. The rankings can be found here.
“Each element of well-being is important on its own, but the elements are also interdependent and well-being is more than the sum of the elements. That only 17 percent of residents in the 135 countries and areas surveyed are thriving in three or more elements underscores how most of the world is struggling to achieve high well-being,” the researchers say in a statement on their website.
“More adults globally are thriving in community well-being (26 percent) than in any other element,” they said, seeing American adults as most likely to thrive in that respect, while sub-Saharan Africans are deemed least likely.
The fewest number of adults worldwide were found to be happy with their purpose in life, Gallup-Healthways discovered.
GDP per capita of countries ranked top and bottom in the index:
Panama - $11,036.81 USD
Costa Rica - $10,184.61 USD
Denmark - $58,929.62 USD
USA - $53,142.89 USD
Russia - $14,611.70 USD
Afghanistan - $678.35 USD
Syria - $2,065.54 USD
A boy dives into a crater filled with water in Aleppo's al-Shaar district, Syria (Reuters / Hosam Katan)
A boy dives into a crater filled with water in Aleppo's al-Shaar district, Syria (Reuters / Hosam Katan)

“Adults in Asia, as well as the Middle East and North Africa, are least likely to be thriving in this element (13 percent in each region), while those in the Americas again top the list of regions, at 37 percent, thriving in purpose well-being.”
The luckiest countries where individuals were likely to be ‘thriving’ in more than three categories start with Panama with 61 percent, followed by Costa Rica with 44, then Denmark, Austria, Brazil, Uruguay, El Salvador, Sweden, Guatemala and Canada, from 39 to 34 percent.
Financial well-being is the only category in which Panama is outdone – by Sweden, with a whopping 72 percent of financially-happy citizens.
Sub-Saharan Africa ranked lowest across the board in all categories, with three or more elements of well-being scoring only nine percent. However, in taking countries separately, it was Afghanistan and Syria who ranked by far the most miserable, with only one percent of Syrian and Afghan adults reporting satisfaction in more than three of the categories.

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