They are the most indebted people in the world, live through long,
dark winters and have a shorter life expectancy than several
Mediterranean countries.
Yet for the past four decades, the Danes have consistently rated themselves as the happiest people on Earth.
But then, in a country where there is an unemployment insurance in
place that guarantees 80-percent wages for two years if you lose your
job, what’s there not to be happy about?
Among foreigners in Denmark, theories as to why the host population
is so content range from its egalitarian policies to its history to
grumblings that some people are simply easier to satisfy than others.
“You can reach a high-ranking politician or a director here even if
you are an ordinary person,” said Josephine Hoegh, a woman from the
Philippines who moved to the Scandinavian country 40 years ago.
The Danes themselves are more puzzled by their purported happiness,
sometimes referring to it facetiously when data paint a less rosy
picture – like when the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and
Development said they were the third-largest consumers per capita of
antidepressants.
Denmark first topped the happiness table in 1973, when a European
Union survey found that people there were more satisfied with life than
in any other member state.
This year, it held on to the top spot in the United Nations’ annual
World Happiness Report even as it suffered through the worst economic
crisis of its post-World War II history.
In the study, respondents were asked to evaluate the current state of
their lives using a scale of zero to 10, where a top rating signified
the best possible life for them, and zero the worst.
Denmark scored an average 7.693.
“One of the most important things making the Danes happy is the
security in Danish society,” said Meik Wiking, director of the Happiness
Research Institute, a Danish think-tank aiming to improve the quality
of life in Denmark and abroad.
“There is a high degree of financial security. If we lose our jobs we
get support, when we fall ill we can go to the hospital, and so on,” he
added.
Denmark has the highest taxes in the world as a percentage of the
overall economy, but many Danes value the social security net they get
in return, including subsidised childcare and unemployment insurance
that guarantees 80-percent wages for two years if they lose their jobs.
The centre-left government has had to cut back on some benefits –
including student grants and unemployment insurance, which used to last
four years – but it still presides over one of the most generous welfare
states in the world.
The second pillar of happiness is a high level of trust between people, even for a stranger on the street, according to Wiking.
This could be a spillover effect from people’s high level of trust in
the government, which is underpinned by a low level of corruption.
“We have a belief that our democratic institutions protect us and that the state… wants what is good for us,” he said.
Denmark’s welfare state isn’t radically different from other Nordic
countries’, but in surveys the nation scores higher than its neighbours
on social relationships, another reason for being happy.
“Danish society is more cohesive. The quality of social relations is
somewhat stronger” than in the rest of Scandinavia, Wiking said.
The country has a large number of clubs and associations where
membership often transcends class barriers. At a chess club, a chief
executive could be playing against someone working in a shop.
Other explanations for the Danes’ self-reported wellbeing can be found in history.
Denmark was a European great power between the 13th and 17th
centuries. But as the country’s official website states, today its size
and influence “is the result of 400 years of forced relinquishments of
land, surrenders and lost battles.”
“They haven’t won anything for the last 200 years, they’ve only lost,
and that’s created a mentality in Denmark of looking inward and of
valuing what you have left,” said Michael Booth, a British expatriate
who has written a book on his adopted Nordic home called “The Almost
Nearly Perfect People”.
Danes also have a knack for denying unpalatable truths, he said.
“They have the highest level of private debt in the world… but
they’re very good at putting their hands over their ears and going
la-la-la,” he said.
“One aspect of that is they’re very good at forgiving public figures
who transgress. Like Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the prime minister who took
them into two terrible wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and also permitted
terrible economic policies.
“He’s really wrecked the economy, but you never hear a bad word said about him.”
There’s also the fact that the Danes don’t work very much, putting in
an average of only 33 hours a week, according to the Rockwool
Foundation.
Still, after initially hating the taxes, the weather and a
“suffocating embarrassment about individual ambition and success,” Booth
admitted that since becoming a parent, there was nowhere else he’d
rather live.
“Denmark is, if not one of the best, maybe even the best country to
have kids. Everything is geared to the family in Denmark,” he said.
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