Finland tops the latest World Happiness Report
I absolutely love Finland. Having visited for the first time over thirty years ago, I’ve found it an incredibly special place with incredibly special people. As an adjunct professor at Turku University, I’ve been privileged to teach some amazing students and to work on research projects with a group of brilliant academics.
Given this, I am not surprised that Finland has once again been ranked the happiest country in the world, while the UK sits in 29th place, a gap that tells us something important about the kind of society people feel they live in.
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That is the real message from the latest World Happiness Report, and Finland’s position is not about cheerful stereotypes or a national gift for contentment but reflects something much more substantial, namely a country that has been more successful than the UK at creating the conditions in which people feel secure, supported, and able to live well.
That should make us pause and reflect, as we too often talk about UK national success in terms of headline measures such as investment, jobs, or economic output. Of course, as this column has said so many times, those things matter immensely, but they do not tell us whether people trust the institutions around them, feel connected to their communities, or believe the future is likely to be better than the present.
That is where Finland appears to do far better than the UK, and the report makes clear that happiness is not some fluffy concept but is shaped by several practical factors, such as income, health, social support, freedom, generosity, and trust in public life. In other words, Finland is not happiest because life is perfect but because more of the basic building blocks of everyday life feel stable and secure.
People are more likely to feel they can rely on others, and public services are more likely to command confidence. There is also a stronger sense that society is broadly fair, that institutions can be trusted, and that everyday life is not a constant struggle against systems that no longer work properly.
That is where the comparison with the UK becomes uncomfortable, as it often feels like a country where too many people carry more anxiety than they used to. As we have seen in the recent Senedd election campaigns, the pressure may come from different sources, such as the cost of living, strained public services, insecure housing, long waits for healthcare, or political distrust, but there is also a sense that too much of life has become harder than it should be.
None of this means the UK is an unhappy country in any absolute sense, and a ranking of 29th still places it well above much of the world. But that is not really the point, and the more relevant question is why we are so far behind smaller countries such as Finland, Denmark and Iceland, and why so many Western countries now appear to be going backwards rather than forwards in terms of wellbeing.
In fact, most western nations are now less happy than they were between 2005 and 2010, and that should concern us, because it suggests this is not just a temporary wobble but rather a deeper erosion of the social foundations of everyday life, and perhaps the most worrying part of all is that this decline is particularly visible among younger people.
For generations, it was assumed that young people would look ahead with greater optimism than their parents, but that seems much less certain now, and the report finds that youth wellbeing has fallen in Western Europe, highlighting evidence that heavy social media use is linked to lower life satisfaction, especially in English-speaking countries and across Western Europe.
It would be too simplistic to blame social media for everything, and indeed the report does not do that, but it does suggest that the digital world has become an additional pressure point in societies where trust, belonging and security may already be under strain.
That matters because wellbeing is rarely shaped by a single big thing alone and is more often shaped by the accumulation of smaller things – whether you feel safe, whether you can get help when you need it, whether institutions seem fair, whether your children are thriving, whether you know your neighbours, and whether you feel you have some control over your future.
That is why the example of Finland matters, and its success in these rankings is not really a story about happiness in the narrow sense but about a country where the structures of daily life appear to support people rather than let them down.
In contrast, the situation in the UK seems more fragile, as we’ve gradually become accustomed to ongoing problems such as overstretched NHS services, deteriorating local government finances, declining political trust, and rising loneliness.
While each problem can be seen as an isolated challenge, collectively they create a very different environment, one in which life feels less stable, less predictable, and less interconnected than it used to be.
For Wales, this question should resonate even more strongly, as we know that wellbeing is shaped not only by national policy but also by the strength of local communities, the accessibility of services, and whether people feel rooted in the places where they live. Wales has real strengths in community identity, social solidarity, and a long tradition of valuing wellbeing as part of public life, but we are not immune to the wider pressures that have weakened trust and confidence across the UK.
Therefore, the lesson from Finland is not that we should try to copy another country wholesale, but that national happiness is built on choices about fairness, public trust, and the quality of everyday life. That is the real challenge for Wales and the rest of the UK: not simply to become more prosperous and generate success, but to create a society in which more people feel secure, connected and hopeful.



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