Wellness

63% of adults are happy despite the global pandemic

And the Chinese are the happiest of all

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 10 Oct 2020 7:00AM

63% of adults are happy despite the global pandemic
Despite the pandemic, the feeling of being 'happy' averages 63% among more than 19,000 adults from 27 countries around the world. – ETX Studio pic, October 10, 2020

ALTHOUGH 2020 has been the year of the covid-19 pandemic, 63% of over 19,000 adults from 27 countries around the world still say they feel happy, according to a new study from Ipsos. That's only a slight drop compared to last year (64%). It seems that the Chinese are the happiest of all, followed by the Dutch and the Saudis.

With a "happiness rate" of 93%, the Chinese come out on top as the world's happiest people, according to this global study. The country gains 11 points on last year, outstripping last year's leaders Canada and Australia, where the feeling of happiness has dropped by eight and nine points respectively year-on-year.

Newly added this year, the Netherlands debuts directly in second place with 87% of participants saying they feel happy, ahead of Saudi Arabia (80%), then France and Canada, both with 78%.

On a global scale, 63% of adults say they feel happy. Moreover, across all 27 countries, 11% of those surveyed say they are very happy. While that percentage is stable compared to 2019 (64%) - despite 2020 being a particularly complicated and stressful year for many people - it nonetheless hides disparities between countries. Very few adults report feeling happier than last year, except in China and Russia (+11 points), as well as in Malaysia (+10 points) and Argentina (+9 points).

Conversely, happiness has dropped 26 points in the space of a year in Peru, which now comes bottom of the list, 15 points in Chile, 13 points in Mexico and 11 points in India. Australians, Canadians and South Africans also reported being less happy than in 2019.

Among 29 sources of happiness measured, the Ipsos Global Happiness 2020 survey found that the greatest drivers of well-being among participants were physical and mental health (55%), relationships with a partner or spouse (49%), children (49%), the feeling that life has meaning (48%), and living conditions (45%). 

"In comparison to the pre-pandemic survey conducted last year, the sources of happiness that have most gained in importance globally pertain to relationships, health, and safety. On the other hand, time and money have ceded some ground as drivers of happiness," the report concludes. 

Other sources of happiness proved particularly important in certain countries, such as personal financial situation (France, Hungary, Russia, South Korea), friends (Australia, Belgium, the UK) and hobbies (Japan).  – ETX Studio, October 10, 2020

Related News

Business / 1mth

Supply crisis to push costs beyond oil prices, Whole-of-nation response needed - Hassan Marican

Malaysia / 1mth

Covid-19 cases in Malaysia stable, no deaths recorded this year – MOH

Tech / 1mth

JustMarkets steps up support as market volatility intensifies in 2026

Malaysia / 2mth

Effects of global supply crisis expected to be felt in 1-2 months - Tengku Zafrul

Off beat / 2mth

Malaysia unveils world’s first AI-powered review system for badminton

World / 2mth

Oil surges past US$100 as US plans blockade at Strait of Hormuz

Spotlight

Malaysia

Jana Wibawa: Muhyiddin's instructions were to consider, not approve the project - Tengku Zafrul

World

Trump declares Iran peace accord 'over'

Malaysia

Rembau Undang’s office ordered to vacate premises within 24 hours amid adat dispute

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Don't repeat old mistakes, five ships must be completed according to cost and schedule – PAC

Malaysia

Friends in Putrajaya, rivals in Johor: Election exposes new realities of coalition politics

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

World

Search intensifies off Karachi after Pakistan cargo jet vanishes following mid-air navigation failure

Malaysia

Salesman gets 10 years jail for slashing motorcyclist with meat cleaver

Malaysia

Thai PM Anutin to make first official visit to Malaysia with border connectivity in focus

Malaysia

Young voters could decide Johor election outcome as parties battle for new electorate

You may be interested

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Living

Matrix Concepts' home ownership campaign offers over RM30m rewards and prizes

Health

Malaysia among top ten medical tourism destinations, with much credit to Penang

By Ian McIntyre