"Money can't buy happiness."This has been repeated many times, and jokes have even been made about it, such as how much better it is to cry in a Ferrari than on a motorcycle! As discovered by the late Arthur Okun, a distinguished American economist, 'misery', as it were, could actually be measured with direct links to inflation and unemployment. He developed the original misery index for the United States only, taking the sum of the inflation and unemployment rates to create it. This, he felt, could adequately tell us how miserable the people in a country were.
Fast forward to the late 2000s and you see Steve Hanke, a Johns Hopkins University economist, expand upon the original index in order to include other countries outside USA. For the updated version, he took the data for each country exclusively from the Economist Intelligence Unit and thus, it became the economic indicator which assumed that both a higher rate of unemployment and a worsening of inflation will create economic and social costs for any country.
Taking a look at the global index, it's easy to see that for most people, their quality of life is important. Constituents prefer lower inflation rates, lower unemployment rates, lower lending rates, and higher GDP per capita. That sounds like a perfect country but in reality is near impossible to satisfy all qualities. Which is why on "The Best" list, you will still see the major contributing factors as to what makes the citizens a little upset (not as much misery as those on "The Worst" list of course!) along with the current rates.
Note: The misery index score is the sum of the unemployment rate, the lending rate, and the inflation rate (consumer prices; end-of-period) minus the percent change in real GDP per capita. Only countries where all four data series were available from the Economist Intelligence Unit were included in this index.
The Most Miserable Countries
Ranking (The Worst) | Country | Misery Index | Major Contributing Factor | Current Figures |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Venezuela | 79.4 | Consumer Prices | 56. 2% |
2 | Iran | 61.6 | Consumer Prices | 39.3% |
3 | Serbia | 44.8 | Unemployment | 20.8% |
4 | Argentina | 43.1 | Consumer Prices | 44.0% |
5 | Jamaica | 42.3 | Interest Rate | 10.6% |
6 | Egypt | 38.1 | Unemployment | 11.9% |
7 | Spain | 37.6 | Unemployment | 25.2% |
8 | South Africa | 37.4 | Unemployment | 25.0% |
9 | Brazil | 37.3 | Interest Rate | 29.7% |
10 | Greece | 36.4 | Unemployment | 24.2% |
The Least Miserable Countries
Ranking (The Best) | Country | Misery Index | Major Contributing Factor | Current Figures |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Japan | 5.41 | Unemployment | 3.6% |
2 | Taiwan | 6.13 | Unemployment | 4.03% |
3 | Singapore | 6.38 | Interest Rate | 3.2% |
4 | Republic of Korea | 6.77 | Interest Rate | 4.4% |
5 | Thailand | 6.83 | Interest Rate | 5.7% |
6 | Qatar | 7.39 | Interest Rate | 0.9% |
7 | Malaysia | 7.88 | Interest Rate | 4.0% |
8 | China | 7.90 | Real GDP Growth | 7.8% |
9 | Panama | 8.24 | Interest Rate | 2.2% |
10 | Norway | 8.75 | Unemployment | 3.5% |
* Caitlyn Ng is an Investigative Journalist of SaveMoney.my, an online consumer advice portal which aims to help Malaysians save money through smart (and most of the time painless) savings in their daily banking, technology, and lifestyle spending habits.
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