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Social Justice

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March 31, 2018

India’s abysmal ranking in the UN Happiness Index exposes deep-seated flaws and contradictions in its social foundation. Discuss

Refer – Business Line

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IAS Parliament 7 years

KEY POINTS

India’s abysmal ranking

·        India is ranked terribly low at 133 out of 156 countries alongside some Sub-Saharan African countries, dropping 11 spots from 2017.

·        Most of the emerging economies Mexico (24), Brazil (28), Argentina (29), Malaysia (35), Russia (59), and China (86) are placed far ahead of India.

·        All the South Asian countries, even Pakistan and Nepal ranked better compared to India.

World happiness report

·        World Happiness index released by UN is basically an appraisal of the general well-being of a nation rather than an indicator of personal happiness.

·        The index doesn’t measure joy and cheerfulness of the people, besides it is a measure of prosperity such as income and healthy life expectancy.

·        Index is based on six key factors found to support wellbeing: Income, Healthy life expectancy, Social support, Freedom, trust, and generosity.

·        Out these six the important variable is trust, which is measured by the absence of corruption in business and government.

·        The issue of migration was placed at the heart of the 2018 report, which also ranked 117 countries according to happiness of their immigrants.

Reasons for India’s awful performance

·        Despite being one of the fastest growing economies, India remains a non-egalitarian country with growing levels of economic inequality.

·        An Oxfam survey in 2017 has revealed that India’s richest 1 per cent has cornered almost 73 per cent of the total wealth created in the country.

·        India’s public health spending is well below the global average (just 1.4 per cent of GDP) leaving the deprived millions to pitiable public healthcare facilities.

·        Even the well-off Indian professional class, who can afford expensive private healthcare, are not guaranteed a long, healthy and happy life.

·        India has failed in building a trustworthy social support system, helping people when they are in real trouble.

·        India’s political system and business establishments are unable to manage big cash flows in a sustainable, responsible and transparent way.

·        Indian response towards the Rohingya crisis, despite being a country that welcomed Tibetans and Sri Lankans, illustrates that generosity and altruism are giving way to pseudo-nationalism and self-obsession.

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