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Britain: Happiest Nation

London - American Author Ernest Hemingway said that Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know. Britishers are happiest people in the country. They are taking 11th happiest country in Europe. People living in the UK are slightly more content with their lives than average compared to the continent as a whole, according to analysis of European data by the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Here 71.8% of adults rated their life satisfaction as seven out of 10 or higher in 2011 - compared to an EU-wide average of 69.3%. Britain scored similarly for happiness to Germany (72.3%) and France (71.6%), but trailed well behind the most content nation, Denmark (91.0%). Citizens of Bulgaria were found to be the least satisfied, with just 38.3% giving a rating of seven out of 10 or higher. The report suggested Britons have less of a sense of attachment to their local community. While 58.4% of people in the UK reported that they felt close to other people in the area where they live, this compared to an EU-wide average of 66.6% and was the second lowest of all 28 nations.

 

The UK was also close to the bottom for how confident people are that they can get help in the event of a problem. When asked who would give them support if they needed advice about a serious personal or family matter, 88.7% of UK respondents said they could count on help from family, friends, neighbours or someone else - the third lowest of all EU countries. People in this country appear to be more content in their relationships with relatives than those on the continent, but less happy with their social lives. The average rating of satisfaction with family life by people aged 16 and over in the UK was 8.2 out of 10, compared to the European average of 7.8. By contrast the average social life satisfaction rating here was 7.0 out of 10, lower than the 7.3 out of 10 recorded for the whole bloc. The research also indicated a sizeable number of families across Europe have been hit by money trouble. A fifth (20.2%) of households in the UK in 2012 reported having difficulty in making ends meet, although this was lower than an estimated average of 27.7% for the 28-nation union.

The proportion of homes facing financial problems in Britain increased from 13.1% to 20.2% between 2005 and 2012, while the EU average changed very little over the same period, a report said. The UK was above the EU average for job satisfaction, the amount of time available to do enjoyable things in daily life and participation in sports and culture. More than six in 10 people (62.7%) in the UK rated their health status as very good or good in 2011 - compared to the EU average of 64.0% researcher Ann Corp said: “The overall picture is we are not in the top few for any of them. “We are near the bottom for a few and the rest are tending towards the middle.”

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