Happiness is one of many
indicators of well-being. On July 9, 2011 the General Assembly of the UN adopted
a resolution which declared, “happiness as a universal goal and aspiration [that]
embodies the spirit of the Millennium Development Goals”. In response, the UN
organized a high level meeting on happiness in April 2012, and in 2013 the UN
declared March 20th as the International Day of Happiness. To enhance the connection
between happiness and sustainable development, the UN supported the publication
of the World Happiness Report in September 2013. The report measured happiness
in 156 countries by examining six variables: GDP per capita, life expectancy,
social support, perceptions of corruption, prevalence of generosity, and the freedom
to make life choices. The report ranks Azerbaijan 116th out of 156
countries, and notes that Azerbaijan has had a negative shift between 2005-2007
and 2010-2012.
Comparing Happiness: 2005–07
and 2010–12. World Happiness Report 2013.
The annual Caucasus
Barometer(CB) asks, “How happy would you say you are?” on a 1 to 5 scale where
1 means extremely unhappy and 5 means extremely happy. The data shows that the
level of reported happiness in Azerbaijan has gradually increased from 2010 to
2012, yet it remains lower than in Armenia and Georgia.
CRRC-Azerbaijan's 2012 survey
on Social Capital, Media, and Gender asked the same question and showed that
19% of Azerbaijanis between 18 and 35 years old say they are extremely happy
relative to those over 56 years old who say the same (9%).
Settlement
type also matters. More people in the capital and urban areas say they feel
happy -points 4 and 5 combined (62% and 65%,
respectively) compared to those who live in rural areas who say the same (46%).
The
correlation between education and happiness can be contentious. British
economist and co-editor of the World Happiness Report, Richard Layards, excluded
education from the list of factors that might have an effect on happiness. However, data from the Social Capital, Media, and Gender survey
shows that there is a strong connection between education and happiness. 93% of
people with a Master's degree and above are more likely to describe themselves
as happy in Azerbaijan, and this percentage declines as the level of education
declines.
For more data on happiness in Azerbaijan please visit the
CRRC
dataset.
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