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GDP per Capita: Represents a country's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) divided by its population, reflecting the average economic output per person. It serves as an indicator of a nation's wealth and standard of living. The GDP per capita is measured in USD and later log scaled for better representation.
Social Support:Considers factors like family support, community involvement, and access to supportive relationships or simply having someone to count on in times of trouble.
Life Expectancy: Represents the average number of years a person is expected to live at birth in a specific country or region. It's a fundamental indicator of the overall health and well-being of a population.
Freedom: Assesses the degree of political and individual freedom within a society. It includes factors such as civil liberties, political rights, and the absence of oppressive conditions.
Generosity: Reflects the willingness of individuals within a society to engage in charitable acts, donate money, or help others without expecting anything in return.
Corruption:Measures the perceived levels of corruption within a country, considering factors like bribery, the integrity of public institutions, and the trustworthiness of governmental bodies.
A detailed report about this dataset is available at: https://happiness-report.s3.amazonaws.com/2023/WHR+23_Statistical_Appendix.pdf
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TwitterThis dataset contains detailed metrics on well-being and happiness indicators, derived from the World Happiness Report 2024. It spans multiple years and includes various dimensions of happiness and quality of life. The dataset is structured as follows:
Features:
Country name: The country for which the data is reported. Year: The year in which the data was collected. Life Ladder: A measure of subjective well-being or life satisfaction on a scale where higher values generally indicate greater happiness. Log GDP per capita: The logarithm of GDP per capita, reflecting economic prosperity and its impact on happiness. Social support: A metric indicating the level of perceived social support or network available to individuals. Healthy life expectancy at birth: The number of years a person is expected to live in good health from birth. Freedom to make life choices: A measure of how free individuals feel in making life decisions. Generosity: A metric reflecting the level of generosity or charitable giving in a country. Perceptions of corruption: A measure of how corrupt the government is perceived to be, influencing trust and satisfaction. Positive affect: The level of positive emotions such as joy and contentment experienced by individuals. Negative affect: The level of negative emotions such as sadness and anxiety experienced by individuals. Usage: This dataset is valuable for analyzing the relationships between various factors and overall happiness, exploring temporal changes, and comparing well-being metrics across different countries and years. It supports a range of analyses from examining trends and patterns in life satisfaction to assessing the impact of economic and social factors on well-being.
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TwitterWorld Happiness This Dataset consists of 4 major verticals covering 1. Family 2. Economy 3. Health 4. Generosity of different countries This data is concluded by collecting different countries data in the years of 2015 , 2016 , 2017 basing on above listed elements.
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TwitterThis dataset was created by Mrunmayi Sathaye
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Context The World Happiness Report is a landmark survey of the state of global happiness . The report continues to gain global recognition as governments, organizations and civil society increasingly use happiness indicators to inform their policy-making decisions. Leading experts across fields – economics, psychology, survey analysis, national statistics, health, public policy and more – describe how measurements of well-being can be used effectively to assess the progress of nations. The reports review the state of happiness in the world today and show how the new science of happiness explains personal and national variations in happiness.
Content The happiness scores and rankings use data from the Gallup World Poll . The columns following the happiness score estimate the extent to which each of six factors – economic production, social support, life expectancy, freedom, absence of corruption, and generosity – contribute to making life evaluations higher in each country than they are in Dystopia, a hypothetical country that has values equal to the world’s lowest national averages for each of the six factors. They have no impact on the total score reported for each country, but they do explain why some countries rank higher than others.
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TwitterThis dataset was created by Poorvik Dharmendra
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This dataset was created by Christian Reyes
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The World Happiness Report may be a point of interest survey of the state of worldwide bliss. The primary report was distributed in 2012, the second in 2013, the third in 2015, and the fourth within the 2016 Upgrade. The World Joy 2017, which positions 155 nations by their bliss levels, was discharged at the Joined together Countries at an occasion celebrating Universal Day of Joy on Walk 20th. The report proceeds to pick up worldwide acknowledgment as governments, organizations and respectful society progressively utilize joy pointers to educate their policy-making choices. Driving specialists over areas – financial matters, brain research, overview investigation, national insights, wellbeing, open approach and more – depict how estimations of well-being can be used effectively to evaluate the advance of countries. The reports survey the state of bliss within the world nowadays and appear how the modern science of bliss clarifies individual and national varieties in bliss.
The joy scores and rankings utilize information from the Gallup World Survey. The scores are based on answers to the most life evaluation address inquired within the survey. This address, known as the Cantril step, asks respondents to think of a step with the most excellent conceivable life for them being a 10 and the most exceedingly bad conceivable life being a and to rate their claim current lives on that scale. The scores are from broadly agent tests for the a long time 2013-2016 and utilize the Gallup weights to create the gauges agent. The columns taking after the bliss score assess the degree to which each of six variables – financial generation, social back, life anticipation, flexibility, nonattendance of debasement, and liberality – contribute to making life assessments higher in each nation than they are in Dystopia, a theoretical nation that has values rise to to the world’s least national midpoints for each of the six variables. They have no affect on the full score detailed for each nation, but they do exp
This file contains the Happiness Score for 153 countries along with the factors used to explain the score.
The Happiness Score is a national average of the responses to the main life evaluation question asked in the Gallup World Poll (GWP), which uses the Cantril Ladder.
The Happiness Score is explained by the following factors:
GDP per capita Healthy Life Expectancy Social support Freedom to make life choices Generosity Corruption Perception Residual error The data is described in much more detail here: link
I did not create this data, only sourced it. The credit goes to the original Authors:
Editors: John Helliwell, Richard Layard, Jeffrey D. Sachs, and Jan Emmanuel De Neve, Co-Editors; Lara Aknin, Haifang Huang and Shun Wang, Associate Editors; and Sharon Paculor, Production Editor
Citation: Helliwell, John F., Richard Layard, Jeffrey Sachs, and Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, eds. 2020. World Happiness Report 2020. New York: Sustainable Development Solutions Network
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The World Happiness Report is the world’s foremost publication on global wellbeing and how to improve it.
We combine wellbeing data from over 140 countries with high-quality analysis by world-leading researchers from a wide range of academic disciplines.
By making the essential insights from wellbeing science accessible to all, we give everyone the knowledge to create more happiness for themselves and others.
The annual report is published by the University of Oxford’s Wellbeing Research Centre in partnership with Gallup, the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, and our Editorial Board.
Our global happiness ranking is based on a single question from the Gallup World Poll, derived from the Cantril Self-Anchoring Striving Scale (Cantril Ladder):
Please imagine a ladder with steps numbered from 0 at the bottom to 10 at the top. The top of the ladder represents the best possible life for you and the bottom of the ladder represents the worst possible life for you. On which step of the ladder would you say you personally feel you stand at this time?
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TwitterThis dataset was created by Muhammad Kumail
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TwitterApache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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This dataset was created by Rob ERT
Released under Apache 2.0