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I ... I ... what makes a country happy ... it's a fair question in this one was ousted over your boy report called the Better Life Index ... by Amgen Jelter MarketWatch and this year's Better Life Index is up and our colleagues' a twenty four Wall Street of going through the numbers ... it's a serious report published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ... and it covers the OECD is thirty four member nations ... today is happiness the OECD measure several factors ... while disposable income was one of those ... is pretty clear money and doesn't define happy this ... year was tops in terms of income ... but Iran's only fourteenth on the lips ... so what matters ... the survey considers eleven categories ... housing income jobs community education ... the environment civic engagement ... health ... life satisfaction safety ... and work life balance ... and which nations are the happiest onerous ... here are the top five in reverse order ... number five ... den or which has a life satisfaction score of seven point five to ten ... among its greatest assets is that seventy percent of the population reports being in good health ... that's due in part to great water near a call ... they also work fewer hours than most other OECD nations ... his one thousand five hundred and fifty two hours a year ... compared with the OECD average ... of one thousand seven hundred and seventy six Elfers number for Sweden with a satisfaction rating of seven point six ... it's a very healthy plants ... eighty percent of the population claims to be in good health ... and they weren't even fewer hours than the Danish neighbors ... with only one point two percent of employees ever having to work what they call ... long hours ... and also against top honors in income equality ... and taking excellent care of its an ARM ... number three on the list is Isla ... which tied with Sweden at seven point six points on the satisfaction Index ... as you might expect from a tight knit island nation ... I still nurse claim the strongest support networks of any country and serve it ... with ninety eight percent of population ... convinced they can count on friends or relatives in time and they ... they also live long healthy lives ... there are rejoicing journalists to be in a two point four years old ... Iceland doesn't score that high in terms of income or wealth with an average household disposable income of just twenty one thousand dollars ... but they receive top scorers in the OECD for income equality Number two in Norway which earned seven point seven on the index ... falling ninety six percent of Norwegians claim they're satisfied with a quality life ... unemployment is an extremely low three point three percent ... at the same time they work even less hours and Daimler ... one thousand four hundred and twenty six hours a year ... there also are high and disposable income at forty four thousand dollars per household ... higher than everyone else Mr. except Luxembourg in the United States ... much of the Wealth courses tied revenue from Norway's offshore oil industry ... which is helpful and an extensive social welfare network a number one on the happiness index Switzerland with a score of seven point eight points ... reasons for the top ranking include best overall sense of well-being among the OECD countries they also tend to be better off than most of their peers with the average household's disposable income coming in and just over thirty thousand dollars ... and a net worth of ninety nine thousand dollars ... which is second only to the United States ... unemployment was a mere four point four percent ... to eighty one percent report are in good health that's the seventh highest in the survey ... and they can expect to be nearly eighty three years old ...