THIMPHU: An impressive 68 per cent of people polled in the isolated Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan are happy, a survey showed on Thursday, and said a focus on family and health, not work, made them so.The poll conducted by the Centre for Bhutan Studies and funded by the Japan Foundation said Bhutanese gave more credence to health and a stable family, than good governance or work when it comes to measuring happiness.

“The main objective of the study was to find out what determined people’s well being, level of happiness and satisfaction with life,” Tashi Choden, who helped compile the survey, told the news agency.

Bhutan, a majority Buddhist mountainous nation of around 700,000, is ranked near the bottom of the world’s development scale so the landlocked country invented a unique way to measure progress by citing gross national happiness (GNH) over gross domestic product (GDP).The policy was decreed by former king Jigme Singye Wangchuck in the 1990s in response to low economic growth in an attempt to reflect quality of life over money.

“The former king was more interested to know if the kids were going to school and maintaining good health, whether the forest cover was well protected, or if expectant mothers were getting adequate healthcare facilities.”—AFP

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