[but how could have Costa Rica have abolished its armed forces? I'd
guess it happened because of (1) the weakness of class inequalities
and antagonisms and (2) the strength of a social-democratic movement
there.]

The New York Times / January 7, 2010

Op-Ed Columnist

The Happiest People
By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF

SAN JOSÉ, Costa Rica

Hmmm. You think it’s a coincidence? Costa Rica is one of the very few
countries to have abolished its army, and it’s also arguably the
happiest nation on earth.

There are several ways of measuring happiness in countries, all
inexact, but this pearl of Central America does stunningly well by
whatever system is used. For example, the World Database of Happiness,
compiled by a Dutch sociologist on the basis of answers to surveys by
Gallup and others, lists Costa Rica in the top spot out of 148
nations.

That’s because Costa Ricans, asked to rate their own happiness on a
10-point scale, average 8.5. Denmark is next at 8.3, the United States
ranks 20th at 7.4 and Togo and Tanzania bring up the caboose at 2.6.

Scholars also calculate happiness by determining “happy life years.”
This figure results from merging average self-reported happiness, as
above, with life expectancy. Using this system, Costa Rica again
easily tops the list. The United States is 19th, and Zimbabwe comes in
last.

A third approach is the “happy planet index,” devised by the New
Economics Foundation, a liberal think tank. This combines happiness
and longevity but adjusts for environmental impact — such as the
carbon that countries spew.

Here again, Costa Rica wins the day, for achieving contentment and
longevity in an environmentally sustainable way. The Dominican
Republic ranks second, the United States 114th (because of its huge
ecological footprint) and Zimbabwe is last.

Maybe Costa Rican contentment has something to do with the chance to
explore dazzling beaches on both sides of the country, when one isn’t
admiring the sloths in the jungle (sloths truly are slothful, I
discovered; they are the tortoises of the trees). Costa Rica has done
an unusually good job preserving nature, and it’s surely easier to be
happy while basking in sunshine and greenery than while shivering up
north and suffering “nature deficit disorder.”

After dragging my 12-year-old daughter through Honduran slums and
Nicaraguan villages on this trip, she was delighted to see a Costa
Rican beach and stroll through a national park. Among her favorite
animals now: iguanas and sloths.

(Note to boss: Maybe we should have a columnist based in Costa Rica?)

What sets Costa Rica apart is its remarkable decision in 1949 to
dissolve its armed forces and invest instead in education. Increased
schooling created a more stable society, less prone to the conflicts
that have raged elsewhere in Central America. Education also boosted
the economy, enabling the country to become a major exporter of
computer chips and improving English-language skills so as to attract
American eco-tourists.

I’m not antimilitary. But the evidence is strong that education is
often a far better investment than artillery.

In Costa Rica, rising education levels also fostered impressive gender
equality so that it ranks higher than the United States in the World
Economic Forum gender gap index. This allows Costa Rica to use its
female population more productively than is true in most of the
region. Likewise, education nurtured improvements in health care, with
life expectancy now about the same as in the United States — a bit
longer in some data sets, a bit shorter in others.

Rising education levels also led the country to preserve its lush
environment as an economic asset. Costa Rica is an ecological pioneer,
introducing a carbon tax in 1997. The Environmental Performance Index,
a collaboration of Yale and Columbia Universities, ranks Costa Rica at
No. 5 in the world, the best outside Europe.

This emphasis on the environment hasn’t sabotaged Costa Rica’s economy
but has bolstered it. Indeed, Costa Rica is one of the few countries
that is seeing migration from the United States: Yankees are moving
here to enjoy a low-cost retirement. My hunch is that in 25 years,
we’ll see large numbers of English-speaking retirement communities
along the Costa Rican coast.

Latin countries generally do well in happiness surveys. Mexico and
Colombia rank higher than the United States in self-reported
contentment. Perhaps one reason is a cultural emphasis on family and
friends, on social capital over financial capital — but then again,
Mexicans sometimes slip into the United States, presumably in pursuit
of both happiness and assets.

Cross-country comparisons of happiness are controversial and
uncertain. But what does seem quite clear is that Costa Rica’s
national decision to invest in education rather than arms has paid
rich dividends. Maybe the lesson for the United States is that we
should devote fewer resources to shoring up foreign armies and more to
bolstering schools both at home and abroad.

In the meantime, I encourage you to conduct your own research in Costa
Rica, exploring those magnificent beaches or admiring those slothful
sloths. It’ll surely make you happy.

Copyright 2010 The New York Times Company
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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