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  • Ireland leads world for quality of life

    The Guardian, UK
    Nov 18 2004

    Ireland leads world for quality of life

    UK comes 29th in global happiness survey

    by Owen Bowcott


    Ireland is easily the best country in the world to inhabit, according
    to a quality of life survey which relegates the United Kingdom to a
    second-division ranking.
    The ambitious attempt to compare happiness around the world is based
    on the principle that wealth is not the only measure of human
    satisfaction.

    The index of 111 states, produced by the Economist Intelligence Unit
    and released yesterday, combines data on incomes, health,
    unemployment, climate, political stability, job security, gender
    equality as well as what the magazine calls "freedom, family and
    community life".

    Displayed on a notional scale of one to 10, rain-washed Ireland
    emerges with a gleaming top score of 8.33, well ahead of second-place
    Switzerland which manages 8.07. The UK languishes in 29th place on
    6.92, narrowly in front of South Korea (6.88). Zimbabwe, racked by
    political insecurity and hunger, is rated the gloomiest, picking up
    only 3.89 points.

    The figures may be reminiscent of a global version of the Eurovision
    Song Contest, but the intention behind the study - to find the best
    country to live in during 2005 - is serious as well as competitive.

    "Although rising incomes and expanded individual choices are highly
    valued," the report says, "some of the factors associated with
    modernisation - such as the breakdown of traditional institutions and
    the erosion of family values - in part offset its positive impact.
    "Ireland wins because it successfully combines the most desirable
    elements of the new (the fourth highest gross domestic product per
    head in the world in 2005, low unemployment, political liberties)
    with the preservation of certain cosy elements of the old, such as
    stable family and community life."

    Ireland's lifestyle victory represents rapid promotion for a country
    which until the 1990s suffered from large scale emigration of
    citizens in search of work abroad. Membership of the EU has, however,
    transformed its prospects. Ireland's GDP per person - a standard,
    comparative economic measure - overtook the UK's GDP several years
    ago: Ireland's is now $36,790 (£19,800) compared to $31,150 in the
    UK. The UK's reputation in Europe also takes a beating. The UK ranked
    the lowest out of the 15 members of the pre-enlargement EU, chiefly
    due to the high social and family breakdown recorded in official
    statistics.

    Our other large European partners like France and Germany, occupying
    25th and 26th position respectively, fared little better. But smaller
    states, including Sweden, Italy, Denmark and Spain, all appeared in
    the top 10. The US, which has the second highest GDP after diminutive
    Luxembourg, slipped to 13th place in the survey. Other big economies
    did even worse. China was in the lower half of the league at 60th
    while Russia, where GDP is only $9,810, scraped in towards the bottom
    on 105th.

    "The results of the surveys have been attracting growing interest in
    recent years," the magazine says. "... It has long been accepted that
    material well-being alone does not adequately measure quality of
    life. Money matters, of course, but surveys suggest that over the
    decades big increases in income have translated into only a modest
    rise in satisfaction."

    The Economist's complex equations used to produce the table gave most
    weight to matters of health, well-being, political stability and
    security. Less importance was attached to climate, job security,
    political freedom and gender equality. The Economist's survey,
    published as The World in 2005, is in its 17th year.

    Other organisations have tried to draw up comparative tables based
    simply on more subjective surveys about happiness. The results do not
    reflect the Economist's priorities. The New Scientist magazine last
    year published a survey which ranked Nigeria as having the highest
    percentage of people who said they were happy, followed by Mexico and
    Venezuela. The citizens of Russia, Armenia and Romania were the most
    miserable.

    Ireland
    First there was a national outcry that a basket of bread, milk and
    vegetables cost more in Dublin than anywhere else in the eurozone.
    Then the president issued a plea last week for post-Celtic Tiger
    Ireland to return to community values. So the Irish were baffled to
    wake up yesterday as the world's most envied country.

    Ireland tops the survey because the 90s boom brought affluence and
    preserved Eamon de Valera's vision of a strong community.

    Ireland is the fourth richest country in the world based on per
    capita income. But a UN report has warned of the gap between rich and
    poor.

    Father Harry Bohan, who runs Céifin, an organisation examining
    values, said after a series of tribunals into government corruption
    and the church's soul-searching, Ireland was now "seeking a new
    spirituality".
    Angelique Chrisafis

    Zimbabwe
    Widespread food shortages. An HIV/Aids infection rate of more than
    25%. Inflation of 200%. Unemployment of 70%. No political freedom.
    State torture.

    Life is tough for most Zimbabweans. Very tough.

    Yet just a few years ago the country was admired as one of the
    sparkling jewels in Africa's crown, blessed with natural resources,
    well-educated people, stability and freedom.

    But Robert Mugabe, 80, is so determined to keep his grip on power
    that he has destroyed these qualities.

    Repressive laws have closed three newspapers. Public meetings of more
    than three people are banned without prior police approval. And the
    Youth Militia, blamed for hundreds of acts of torture, rape, beatings
    and theft, is to be increased.

    But no one can ruin Zimbabwe's delicious sub-tropical climate, its
    sunny days and invigorating air.
    Andrew Meldrum
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