Nya wajar we atuh mang kabayan; kapan saatna borojol jadi OROK geus ditungguan 
ku HUTANG salaput Hulu pan NKRI mah.

--- On Thu, 10/1/13, Mang Kabayan <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Mang Kabayan <[email protected]>
Subject: [Urang Sunda] RE: Nasib?
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected], [email protected], 
[email protected], [email protected]
Received: Thursday, 10 January, 2013, 12:06 AM
















 



  


    
      
      
      







Horeeeeeeeeey… Indonesia masuk 10 besar euy Kang :D. 

   

10 besar pang bontotna maksudna wkkkkkk… Edun euy
Singapore ka- 6, New Zealand ka-7… Walanda 8, Canada 9, Hongkong 10….
Australia gaya euy ka-2. Swis gara-2 Coklat sigana No. 1 wkkkk. 

   

Tapi da menurut Mang Samin urang Malang….bong mah teteeeeep
walopun lahirna di Paraji… Kampung Aing pang hoki-na hehehe.  

   

   





From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of rsyaifoel

Sent: Tuesday, January 08, 2013 9:46 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: [Baraya_Sunda] nu nangtukeun nasib? 











The lottery of life

Where to be born in 2013

Nov 21st 2012 | from The World In 2013 print edition



Warren Buffett, probably the world's most successful investor, has said that
anything good that happened to him could be traced back to the fact that he was
born in the right country, the United States, at the right time (1930). A
quarter of a century ago, when The World in 1988 light-heartedly ranked 50
countries according to where would be the best place to be born in 1988,
America indeed came top. But which country will be the best for a baby born in
2013?



To answer this, the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), a sister company of The
Economist, has this time turned deadly serious. It earnestly attempts to
measure which country will provide the best opportunities for a healthy, safe
and prosperous life in the years ahead.



Its quality-of-life index links the results of subjective life-satisfaction
surveys—how happy people say they are—to objective determinants of
the quality of life across countries. Being rich helps more than anything else,
but it is not all that counts; things like crime, trust in public institutions
and the health of family life matter too. In all, the index takes 11
statistically significant indicators into account. They are a mixed bunch: some
are fixed factors, such as geography; others change only very slowly over time
(demography, many social and cultural characteristics); and some factors depend
on policies and the state of the world economy.



Related topics

Euro zone

Switzerland

United States

A forward-looking element comes into play, too. Although many of the drivers of
the quality of life are slow-changing, for this ranking some variables, such as
income per head, need to be forecast. We use the EIU's economic forecasts to
2030, which is roughly when children born in 2013 will reach adulthood.



Despite the global economic crisis, times have in certain respects never been
so good. Output growth rates have been declining across the world, but income
levels are at or near historic highs. Life expectancy continues to increase
steadily and political freedoms have spread across the globe, most recently in
north Africa and the Middle East. In other ways, however, the crisis has left a
deep imprint—in the euro zone, but also elsewhere—particularly on
unemployment and personal security. In doing so, it has eroded both family and
community life.



Enlarge

What does all this, and likely developments in the years to come, mean for
where a baby might be luckiest to be born in 2013? After crunching its numbers,
the EIU has Switzerland comfortably in the top spot, with Australia second.



Small economies dominate the top ten. Half of these are European, but only one,
the Netherlands, is from the euro zone. The Nordic countries shine, whereas the
crisis-ridden south of Europe (Greece, Portugal and Spain) lags behind despite
the advantage of a favourable climate. The largest European economies (Germany,
France and Britain) do not do particularly well.



America, where babies will inherit the large debts of the boomer generation,
languishes back in 16th place. Despite their economic dynamism, none of the
BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) scores impressively. Among the
80 countries covered, Nigeria comes last: it is the worst place for a baby to
enter the world in 2013.



Boring is best



Quibblers will, of course, find more holes in all this than there are in a
chunk of Swiss cheese. America was helped to the top spot back in 1988 by the
inclusion in the ranking of a "philistine factor" (for cultural
poverty) and a "yawn index" (the degree to which a country might,
despite all its virtues, be irredeemably boring). Switzerland scored terribly
on both counts. In the film "The Third Man", Orson Welles's
character, the rogue Harry Lime, famously says that Italy for 30 years had war,
terror and murder under the Borgias but in that time produced Michelangelo,
Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance; Switzerland had 500 years of peace and
democracy—and produced the cuckoo clock.



However, there is surely a lot to be said for boring stability in today's (and
no doubt tomorrow's) uncertain times. A description of the methodology is
available here: food for debate all the way from Lucerne to Lagos.



Laza Kekic: director, country forecasting services, Economist Intelligence Unit



from The World In 2013 print edition



http://www.economist.com/news/21566430-where-be-born-2013-lottery-life 





 










    
     

    
    






  








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