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World happiness sinks to record low in over a decade: Study

A Yemeni child plays on used car tires in the northern Yemeni district of Hajjah Province on August 6, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

World happiness levels are at their lowest level in over a decade, with the number of people who say they feel stressed and worried rising, according to a survey published on Wednesday.

The conflict-hit Central African Republic (CAR) was the world's unhappiest place last year, with Iraq in second place, according to the ranking by pollster Gallup.

"Collectively, the world is more stressed, worried, sad and in pain today than we've ever seen it," the group's managing editor, Mohamed Younis, wrote in a foreword to the study.

Gallup surveyed more than 154,000 people in 146 countries on whether they had felt pain, worry, stress, anger, or sadness the previous day. It said the global mood was at its gloomiest since the first such survey in 2006.

Sub-Saharan Africa mainly led the way, with 24 of 35 countries surveyed reaching 10-year happiness lows in 2017, often due to civic unrest crippling healthcare systems and causing people to go hungry.

"In CAR and some of these other places, high percentages of the population are just struggling to afford the basics," the study's lead author, Julie Ray, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone.

A young displaced boy learns basic blacksmith techniques as he melts iron to forge kitchen tools at a camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) at Bangassou, in the southeast of the Central African Republic, on June 8, 2018. (Photo by AFP)

CAR has been ravaged by violence, with most of the country now beyond the control of the government, and about three in four residents said they experienced pain and worry.

Almost the same number of people unhappy in America as in the CAR

Wealthier countries were not immune to the dip in mood.

About half the Americans interviewed said they were stressed — roughly the same proportion of respondents as in the CAR.

Economist Jan-Emmanuel De Neve said it was "disturbing" to see the global mood souring against a backdrop of rising wealth and material progress.

"There is probably a more structural indicator around the increasing wealth not being inclusive enough," said De Neve, an associate professor at the University of Oxford, who has written about the link between income and happiness.

Paraguay topped a second table of most positive countries, in which residents were asked if they felt well-rested, had been treated with respect, enjoyed themselves, or learnt something the previous day. War-torn Yemen and Afghanistan came bottom.

(Source: Reuters)


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