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- <text id=93TT2222>
- <title>
- Sep. 13, 1993: Most Happy Nation
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Sep. 13, 1993 Leap Of Faith
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLLS, Page 56
- Most Happy Nation
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Contentment is...pretty hard to find anywhere you go these
- days--or so say a bevy of international pollsters
- </p>
- <p>By KEVIN FEDARKO--With reporting by Victoria Foote-Greenwell/Paris, Satsuki Oba/Tokyo
- and Rhea Schoenthal/Bonn
- </p>
- <p> The French say they're happy--in a manner of speaking. Despite
- 12% unemployment, a faltering franc and the highest number of
- AIDS cases in Europe, an opinion poll in the weekly Le Nouvel
- Observateur found that 88% of French people claim to be happy.
- Huh? It turns out that the French are just happy not to be unhappy:
- relief at holding a job and not being infected with AIDS is
- what makes them smile.
- </p>
- <p> The French, of course, take the question seriously. Each day
- during August, the newspaper Liberation devoted a full page
- to leading pontificators on the art of feeling good. Jean-Michel
- Cousteau, son of oceanographer Jacques, recently proposed creating
- a "Science of Joy" in which "happinessologists" would study
- gaiety in all its guises. Several neurologists in Paris even
- claim they can use thermography to record changes in the brain
- generated by le bonheur to determine who is really content.
- </p>
- <p> But has the Gallic propensity for philosophizing really brought
- the French closer to understanding this thing called happiness?
- The U.N. once formulated a 12-point list of prerequisites for
- being happy that includes one radio, one bicycle and one set
- of kitchen utensils per family. But after such items have been
- acquired, what then? That leaves the field to the pollsters,
- who have attempted to catalog the many flavors of felicity by
- quizzing citizens around the world on whether they are "satisfied"
- with their jobs, "fulfilled" with their sex lives and "at ease"
- with themselves.
- </p>
- <p> The numbers, naturally, lie--or only tell smidgens of the
- truth. The Nouvel Observateur poll neglected to point out that
- a Gallup survey one year ago had pronounced France among the
- unhappiest societies on the Continent. The poll also disclosed
- that 72% of French are in fact less happy today than they were
- 10 years ago, 60% believe things will "get worse," and 66% are
- plagued by the troubling knowledge that somewhere in the world
- there may actually be people who are not as happy as they are.
- </p>
- <p> Like the Germans. To the less fortunate, the Germans live in
- paradise. They have achieved a miracle of high income and productivity
- with the fewest work hours. They love time off, especially at
- vacation spots that require a minimum of clothing and a maximum
- of sunscreen. They shop madly and stand in long lines at the
- cheese counter, are figure conscious and sports crazy, and see
- their doctors regularly. But if you ask a German how he's doing,
- the response is a shrug.
- </p>
- <p> In a recent survey, less than one-third admitted to being "very
- happy," while only 31% of West Germans and a mere 9% in the
- East could agree with the statement "We live in a happy age."
- Moreover, surprisingly quirky definitions were offered when
- the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung asked, "What for you
- is complete happiness on earth?" The sensual, said Swiss writer
- Hans A. Pestalozzi: "Sex with a woman one loves under the smoldering
- heat of the sun." The mundane, said theater critic Georg Hensel:
- "Sole fried in butter." And former Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
- declared definitively, "There's no such thing."
- </p>
- <p> The British felt pretty good about themselves back in the '80s,
- what with victory in the Falklands and Margaret Thatcher as
- Prime Minister. Now they are unhappy about what they don'thave:
- a thriving economy, job security, falling crime rates, ethnic
- harmony. No wonder a Gallup poll in July found that 54% feel
- their country is a snobbish, class-ridden society, 75% are convinced
- that the royal family lead indolent, jet-set lives, and only
- 3% predict that Britain will remain a world power in the next
- decade. Such responses may explain why, when asked if they would
- like to leavethe country, 47% said they would pack their bags
- before teatime.
- </p>
- <p> The Russians, on the other hand, have never pretended to happiness.
- So pollsters there prefer to plumb matters about which the Russians
- have some working knowledge--like misery. Surveys reveal that
- a growing minority, now 14%, feel they would have been better
- off if the hard-line coup of 1991 had succeeded, 63% say they
- are sorry the Soviet Union collapsed and 72% believe life under
- capitalism is even more wretched than it was under communism.
- So depressed are the Russians that 27% confided to pollsters
- that they would be delighted to emigrate to Western Europe,
- even if it meant moving to Britain.
- </p>
- <p> Until several years ago, the best chance of finding instant
- felicity was to go to Japan, a society that polls still purport
- to be among the most satisfied on earth. A principal reason
- for such fulfillment no doubt lay in one of the country's most
- alluring tourist attractions: a remote railway depot on the
- northern island of Hokkaido called Koufuku Eki, or Happiness
- Station. There, travelers whose feet had strayed from the path
- to contentment could set themselves aright by reaching into
- their pockets, plunking down $2.10 and buying, literally, "a
- ticket to Happiness."
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, because the railway failed to make sufficient
- profits, Koufuku Eki was forced to shut its doors in 1987--a passing that has left the world a notch less happy.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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