Life satisfaction measures how people evaluate their life and is a subjective indicator that complements more objective indicators of life quality.
When asked to rate their general satisfaction with life on a scale from 0 to 10, people on average across the OECD gave it a 6.7 in 2016-17 ( 8.1). However, life satisfaction is not evenly shared across OECD countries. People in Finland, Denmark and Norway are most satisfied with their lives, with scales of 7.5 and higher, and the other Nordic countries are not much behind. The measured level of life satisfaction in the Nordics is about 2.5 steps higher than in Greece, the country at the bottom of the ranking. Other countries with low life satisfaction include Turkey, Portugal, Hungary, Estonia and Korea. Life satisfaction also varies between emerging economies, from a scale above 6 in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica and Saudi Arabia, to below 5 in India and South Africa.
OECD average life satisfaction in 2016-17 is similar to 2006-07 levels ( 8.1). Life satisfaction declined in only nine out of 36 OECD countries, with major drops in Greece, Italy and Spain, three countries that were hit particularly hard by the global economic crisis in 2008-09. In contrast, satisfaction with life considerably improved in Latvia, Hungary and Iceland.
Life satisfaction varies by socio-demographic group ( 8.2). While men and women report similar levels of life satisfaction on average across OECD countries, there are large gender gaps in certain countries, like Italy and the United Kingdom where men report higher levels than women, and Japan and Korea where women report higher levels than men. Life satisfaction tends to decrease with age and young people are on average happier than older age groups. Youth from Finland and Iceland are the most satisfied with their lives in the OECD, while people aged 50 and over in Greece report the lowest levels. A full-time job, higher education and higher income increase the likelihood of higher life satisfaction, while the place where you live (urban versus rural) does not seem to influence life satisfaction on average. Even so, life satisfaction in Australia and the Czech Republic tend to be considerably higher in rural areas than in urban areas, while the opposite is true in Korea, Latvia, Lithuania and Mexico, as well as in all emerging economies.
A snapshot of people’s daily feelings and emotions is presented in 8.3, using the positive and negative experience indexes of Gallup. Among OECD countries, the composite “positive experience” index is highest in Mexico and Norway and lowest in Turkey, while the “negative experience” index is highest in Greece and lowest in Estonia. Across these countries, high values of the positive experience index tend to be associated with high scores of life satisfaction, while there is only a weak negative correlation between the positive and negative experience indexes.