The 2 percent who are thriving in Cambodia |
The remaining 98 percent who are struggling and suffering in Cambodia |
Poll: 74 percent are ‘thriving’ in Denmark
WASHINGTON, April 10 (UPI) — Worldwide, 24 percent say they are “thriving,” from a high of 74 percent in Denmark to a low of 2 percent in Cambodia, surveys of 146 countries indicate.
The Gallup surveys involved face-to-face and telephone interviews of about 1,000 adults per country, age 15 and older, in 2011. Gallup
classifies respondents as thriving, struggling, or suffering based on
how they rate their current and future lives on a ladder scale with
steps numbered from 0 to 10.
People were considered thriving if they rate their current lives a 7
or higher and their lives in five years an 8 or higher, Gallup officials
said.
Majorities of residents in 17 countries rated their lives well enough
to be classified as thriving, with Denmark far ahead of the 66 percent
thriving in Canada and the Netherlands.
The United States just missed making the Top 10, with 56 percent of Americans saying they were thriving.
Well-being was generally lowest in sub-Saharan Africa, where the
median thriving percentage was 12 percent but 29 percent in Ghana and 35
percent in Angola said they were thriving.
A median of 20 percent in the Middle East and North Africa said they
were thriving — similar to what Gallup measured before the Arab Spring.
Sixty-five percent said they were thriving in Israel — the highest score
in the region — followed by 58 percent in United Arab Emirates and 51
percent in Oman. Fewer than one in 10 said they were thriving in Egypt
and 8 percent in Yemen.
The margin of error for each country ranged from 1.7 percentage points to 5.7 percentage points.
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