How Finland Became the World's Happiest Country

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 мар 2023
  • How did such a cold isolated place become the world's happiest country?
    Twitter: / h0serr
    Business Email: h0sermailYT@gmail.com
    Some sources: pastebin.com/5CaKhRCc

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @Ho_Lii_Fuk
    @Ho_Lii_Fuk Год назад +18907

    Finnish happiness comes also down to modesty. Finns don't usually dream about huge mansions and endless amounts of sports cars and women, but rather just a nice cottage on the shore of a lake in the middle of forest with enough money to live that simple life for the rest of their lives. That's the finnish dream.

    • @subliminalfalllenangel2108
      @subliminalfalllenangel2108 Год назад +266

      Ngl, that sounds boring. Are you sure that's Finnish's definition of happiness? I'm not saying that you need huge mansions and sport cars to be happy but staying in the cottage or forest for a long period will drive me crazy. And from the look of it, Finland doesn't look that... deserted?

    • @tonttu7979
      @tonttu7979 Год назад +3232

      ​@@subliminalfalllenangel2108i mean everyone is different but as a finn yes id say a lot of people including me have that end goal, to be surrounded by forest and not have to worry about society or other people or any of that bullshit

    • @subliminalfalllenangel2108
      @subliminalfalllenangel2108 Год назад +100

      @@tonttu7979 do Finnish people often have live music concerts or sth like that? Or are most Finnish people just the "Netflix and chill" kind of people?

    • @tonttu7979
      @tonttu7979 Год назад +1140

      @@subliminalfalllenangel2108 wouldnt say often. We have a metal scene and a small urban clubbing scene, and some festivals in summer, but most people just drink in small groups or with a friend or two in sauna. Then there's also the practice of drinking alone at home which we have a whole word for

    • @painanmutsiis7236
      @painanmutsiis7236 Год назад +390

      @@subliminalfalllenangel2108well we have most metal bands per inhabitant

  • @tamriales
    @tamriales 3 месяца назад +1474

    I'm American, what are these words? "Trust"? "Financial security"? "Free education"? Foreign Finnish words I say

    • @LePlug23
      @LePlug23 2 месяца назад +8

      I agree

    • @angelantayhua3096
      @angelantayhua3096 Месяц назад +50

      Also “prioritizing transportation”

    • @TheTimurdempire
      @TheTimurdempire Месяц назад +10

      Absolutely disgusting

    • @pinklizard1589
      @pinklizard1589 Месяц назад +19

      Yea could someone maybe translate them from Finnish? Google translate isn’t helping

    • @Yupj711
      @Yupj711 Месяц назад +3

      What i understand from your comment is that in america you don't have this thingd but Isnt america has financial security and free eductation???

  • @princessmona1432
    @princessmona1432 8 месяцев назад +1148

    I think that instead of calling Finland the happiest country, they are the most content. They’re not smiling and laughing, or in a joyful bliss… but they are content with what they have and their quality of life. As Norwegian with Finn roots and Finn friends, I feel especially the Norwegians in the north relate to the Finns.
    And tbh, despite already living in a country that’s said to be one of the best to live in.. I really want to live in Finland, I just gotta learn Finnish first 😅

    • @adieuuuu
      @adieuuuu 7 месяцев назад +16

      For me i would love to move to Norway from Finland.... I just love the mountain scenery

    • @butterflies655
      @butterflies655 5 месяцев назад +15

      Wrong! They are smiling and laughing. I lived in other countries. Nobody smiled 24/7.

    • @icezak4964
      @icezak4964 Месяц назад +3

      i wanna live in finland too, and im also trying to learn the language. though i think i would every now and then like to take a train or drive too norway or parts of sweeden for that nice mountain scenery. i dont have any finn roots at all, much less any scandinavian roots, but i do have one really close friend who lives there

    • @sapphicsapphire82
      @sapphicsapphire82 Месяц назад +1

      I’ve been trying to learn Finnish for the past year and a half. Good luck.

    • @NazriB
      @NazriB Месяц назад

      Lies again? Maria Ferrari USD SGD

  • @lexnash9838
    @lexnash9838 10 месяцев назад +651

    "Can you imagine how miserable the rest of the world must be?" My thoughts exactly, as a Finn.

    • @diamondsarenotforever8542
      @diamondsarenotforever8542 9 месяцев назад +9

      Finland is a lovely , wonderful country.
      Don't underestimate your own good country IF you are a finn at all.

  • @kahveli5358
    @kahveli5358 Год назад +8836

    "This is the happiest? Can you imagine how miserable the rest of the world must be?"
    This is excatly what we finns are actually thinking.
    Spot on :D Thank you!

    • @mokisan
      @mokisan Год назад +156

      How do I move to finland? I am someone who loves the cold weather.

    • @rendola1514
      @rendola1514 Год назад +407

      @@mokisan bro thought to move to a country you need just to do /tp

    • @someguyfromfinlandtj125
      @someguyfromfinlandtj125 Год назад +348

      @@mokisanWell if you are thinking of moving to Finland there are couple things to keep in mind: - everything is expensive becose high taxes, so either be really rich or have a stable job. - The language is super hard to learn but you should be relatively fine with english, especially with younger people. - It’s not always cold in Finland. summer’s have lately reached even 30 degrees celcius thanks to global warming. More average summer temperature is about 20 degrees though.
      And how to move to Finland? Well buy plane tickets, duh.

    • @FinQuerilla
      @FinQuerilla Год назад +111

      There's a saying:
      Finn would pay 100€ so his neighbor wouldn't get extra 50€

    • @axhed
      @axhed Год назад

      @@mokisan just call them a bunch of r*cists for being 90% finnish so they have to let you in.

  • @Zanoskei
    @Zanoskei Год назад +8601

    As an Australian who lived in Finland for about 3 years, I think the 'Happiness' index measure isn't really the right word. It should really be called the 'Contentedness Index', Finns are definitely the most content people on Earth, they're okay with things just being okay. Adopting that mindset really improved my life and I'm very thankful I got to live in Finland for a couple years.

    • @qO.0p
      @qO.0p Год назад +334

      This is exactly how (finnish) researchers/experts explain it when (finnish) journalists ask and wonder the same thing every single year

    • @MM-kz9pd
      @MM-kz9pd Год назад +57

      Nevertheless many Finns are jealous when a neighbour has something more.. so it means they wouldn’t mind having more, travelling around the world etc

    • @CoolMaisa
      @CoolMaisa Год назад +200

      This. Content. Not happy. We also have pretty high suicide rates and there's a lot of things inside our social culture that don't work and can make people miserable. Some of those things are changing though and I really hope a new generation would take up the reigns already.. Oh, and bureaucracy here is a torture machine.

    • @Zanoskei
      @Zanoskei Год назад +11

      @@MM-kz9pd yeah they do really want to "climb the ladder" together, I remember people giving so much shit to successful Finnish youtubers

    • @eerohorila1109
      @eerohorila1109 Год назад +13

      You naled it bro. We are content with what we have. You can pursue for more but you dont have to.

  • @ZettaFish
    @ZettaFish 3 месяца назад +160

    as a finnish person we often take these things for granted, not realizing how lucky we are to be so content

    • @justanothermortal1373
      @justanothermortal1373 3 месяца назад +4

      You should be thankful every single day. Coming from a low income country that sticks to traditional values, I can't tell you how blessed you are.

    • @ZettaFish
      @ZettaFish 3 месяца назад +4

      @@justanothermortal1373 yeah, it's really hard to see it sometimes. but i feel very lucky to be here

    • @NuSuntSerb
      @NuSuntSerb Месяц назад

      ​@@justanothermortal1373traditional values dont make a country poor

    • @mursuhillo242
      @mursuhillo242 Месяц назад

      Content; adjective
      Describing the state of mind where one is hovering right in the middle of being too depressed to live and high on extacy
      Contents; noun
      The whatever the previously content person used to have inside their upper gastrointestinal system.

  • @celemink
    @celemink Месяц назад +35

    I recently went to Finland to visit family for the first time. They live in a city of 4000 people. It was so North we were in the North Pole territory, at -30 degrees Celsius. And yet, it was the happiest days I have ever spent. With only 3 hours of light and barely any distractions (malls or cinemas, etc), the sense of community and respect was HUGE. I was constantly impressed by their trust. They leave bikes untied and stores unattended, asking to simply grab what you need and leave the money.
    It is the only place I have ever felt safe at night. I remember asking a bunch of construction workers if I could ride with them to the village as I was very tired from my hike. Now that I think about it, I would have never gotten in a truck full of men in any other place.
    People say they are cold, but in reality they are incredibly open minded, they have a deep connection to nature and spread kindness around.
    Here we tend to be impressed by nudity, but in Finland they treat it as something natural and beautiful. Going out of the sauna half naked and jumping into a pile of snow outside is something I never imagined myself doing.
    The local fish store woman would gift me leftover raw fish to eat with bread, as she simply wanted me to enjoy her delicious food.
    All in all I felt free, I felt loved, I felt healthy and I felt like I belonged. ❤

  • @idomeneogames583
    @idomeneogames583 Год назад +2479

    i studied in Helsinki for a while, which at the time held the world’s highest suicide rate. I asked one of my professors how Finland could be the happiest country while this was true at the same time, and he responded “oh, it’s quite simple! you see, all the sad people are gone by the time we do the surveys”

    • @CorporalCookie
      @CorporalCookie Год назад +177

      That's the old joke, though it was never true.

    • @Settiis
      @Settiis Год назад +120

      No but honestly, I don’t know who the people are who fill those surveys. Definitely not anyone that I’ve ever met in my 23 years of living.

    • @Settiis
      @Settiis Год назад +39

      @@stolekostov5111 I’m not saying it’s bad here. I’m just saying that I’ve genuinely never heard anyone even mention about such surveys.

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад +107

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country.....

    • @glanwen10969
      @glanwen10969 Год назад +40

      The suicide rates have gone down from what it was in the end of last millenia, but it is true that our young population is not feeling good. Especially the pandemic took many important years away from them, time when you experience generational things like graduations, going to universities, bond with other people finding your friends for life or a partner. Things you can't get back really. Isolation is a poison.

  • @astroturd
    @astroturd Год назад +2343

    I'm from Finland and this video is incredibly well-researched, so thank you very much. The only thing I would clarify is that the income tax rate of 56,5% is only for the highest income class, having a gross salary of literally a million euros per year. Finnish income tax (for salary) is very progressive, with the national median salary having a tax rate of 26%, and if you are for instance a student working a job for 2-3 months during the summer leave, you only get taxed a few percent.

    • @renanvinicius6036
      @renanvinicius6036 Год назад +23

      It kinda still high anyways...

    • @ThankUYoutubeForChangingMyName
      @ThankUYoutubeForChangingMyName Год назад +23

      I know it's not all taxes, but if you gross in salary 100,000 € a year in Finland, you'll only get approximately half of that.

    • @astroturd
      @astroturd Год назад +270

      ​@@renanvinicius6036 That's true, but the system does work in Finland. Without free education and healthcare I would definitely not have a degree, and would probably be too sick to work. But instead I am educated and working, and paying those high taxes and thus contributing back into society. Obviously most rich people don't like to pay high taxes, but not a lot of them understand that their tax money also contributes to a better and safer society, where you don't need to spend money on private security and building gated communities. And BTW private education in Finland isn't really even a thing, and specialized healthcare is pretty much always higher quality in Finland (private clinics are small and don't do a lot), so even the rich benefit from our welfare system.

    • @renanvinicius6036
      @renanvinicius6036 Год назад

      @@astroturd bro, you are like paying half of what you make in taxes and is expensive to live not only in Finland, but Nordic countries as a whole, the minimum you would have to demand is what you have got, nothing is for FREE you are paying for this, it seems obvious, but the way you guys portray public systems is wrong, and it opens up the way to populist cretin politicians to explore this and find ways to do what they like the most, spend your money with unnecessary stuff and make their image good because they are "taking care" of you. Please just stop it, I even prefere some public systems rather than private, but abusive taxes and people saying things are for free, I honestly cannot take it.

    • @elli8104
      @elli8104 Год назад +7

      Suomi gang

  • @ilia7407
    @ilia7407 3 месяца назад +254

    I live in russia, it's just mindblowing how these two countries are different.
    We don't have any trust in the government, neighbors, society. And every time it's proved a reasonable strategy.
    You just don't feel safe , you can rely only on your immediate family .
    Total corruption, horrors of war, tyrany, low incomes and poverty, absolute indifference from everyone , the feeling that you're outcast to the rest of the world

    • @MuRKekc33
      @MuRKekc33 3 месяца назад +24

      Подписываюсь под каждым словом

    • @alismustgettoknow6632
      @alismustgettoknow6632 3 месяца назад +35

      I think the same. It's honestly my dream for Russia to be at least a bit like Finland in the future, for it to improve in my lifespan..😢❤

    • @austinobst8989
      @austinobst8989 2 месяца назад +13

      The symptoms of a right wing oligarchy.

    • @erokhinsergei9558
      @erokhinsergei9558 2 месяца назад +2

      и когда вы на себе последний раз испытывали тотальную коррупцию?

    • @merahdelimakayumanggi
      @merahdelimakayumanggi 2 месяца назад +4

      You should blame Poootiiiin!😁

  • @alinalbelieber
    @alinalbelieber 4 месяца назад +102

    We were in Finland for 1 month this year and we want to move from Germany to Finland in a few years. Ppl are honest, mostly chilled and don’t set high expectations. I think they learned to take life as it is while being so close to the extreme nature, with all pros and cons.

    • @Pika0294
      @Pika0294 Месяц назад +1

      Good idea. Here in Germany or especially Central Europe it's all about high expectations, career chasing, money etc.. The mindset is one I don't like and truly makes me unhappy compared to friends who live in Finland who are grateful and happy with what they have.

  • @acethefiredragon8525
    @acethefiredragon8525 Год назад +1894

    Here in Norway (and this is probably a thing everywhere in the world that has long dark winters), we have something called “winter depression”. Basically a period during winter (duh) where everyone suddenly feel very depressed. And the theory is that it’s due to the lack of sun. The fact that the days become shorter and nights becoming longer results in people feeling more depressed. The moment summer comes around, everyone is just a lot more happier and livelier. So yeh, those cold climates is definitely not the reason we’re happy.

    • @Johnny_JD
      @Johnny_JD Год назад +164

      there’s actually a biological reason for this, since sunlight decreases stress in humans and boosts our mood.

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp 11 месяцев назад +124

      It is lack of D-Vitamin. That's why the Finn's, Norwegian's, Inuit and Sami Ate Fish. Two ways to get it, eat it or sunlight.

    • @plasmakitten4261
      @plasmakitten4261 10 месяцев назад +30

      ​@@Kali-Yuga-Peace-CorpWell aside from how fish is very plentiful in Scandinavia due to the hundreds of miles of coastline

    • @bebababu8955
      @bebababu8955 8 месяцев назад +6

      Oh wait til you hear about spring anxiety lol

    • @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp
      @Kali-Yuga-Peace-Corp 8 месяцев назад +8

      @@plasmakitten4261 Norway has a long coastline. The fish in Baltic Sea is not recommended to eat because of pollution.

  • @LegoAnimations6370
    @LegoAnimations6370 Год назад +5511

    For an individual Finn, the secret is this.
    - be quiet
    - consume alcohol even if you fail or win in life
    - eat sausages
    - go to sauna twice a week (double the sauna in summer)
    - enjoy the nature
    - embrace the coldness of winter
    - embrace traditions and don't forget your own culture

    • @icanusesakurasforeheadasap4304
      @icanusesakurasforeheadasap4304 Год назад +86

      Sounds so peaceful. Are there any poor ppl in Finland bc it may be a real life utopia

    • @meatgrinder9506
      @meatgrinder9506 Год назад +270

      @@icanusesakurasforeheadasap4304 Where there is capitalism, there's poverty. (So yes)

    • @tappajaav
      @tappajaav Год назад +50

      @@icanusesakurasforeheadasap4304 Yes, nearly million people in finland fall under the global poverty line

    • @bloodhound989
      @bloodhound989 Год назад +190

      @@icanusesakurasforeheadasap4304 But the poverty in Finland is a bit different. There is not really homeless people the same way as in other countries (atleast middle and south Europe. Not sure about other nordic countries). Government usually takes care of homeless poeple in Finland and offers help to them. We might get appartment or money from government when we dont have money but in Finland everything is expensive and many poeple are lining to bread lines (where u get a little bit of food for free if you are not doing good money wise at the moment). So there is quite a lot poverty, its just different poverty. And again example we have free school so people usually get the chance to go there even though their family is poor. And there is free meal in school. Poverty just gives a problems in the family example and free time with hobbies.

    • @LegoAnimations6370
      @LegoAnimations6370 Год назад +7

      @@XfirefoxX1 No päivää, päivää!

  • @mojyoqueen350
    @mojyoqueen350 3 месяца назад +15

    Nokia is a good representation of Finland. It was very secure. Literally indestructible. Nokia 3310 is a legend. Nokia was my first phone and although now I have a smartphone, my almost 20 years old Nokia still works.

  • @ApexRex187
    @ApexRex187 6 месяцев назад +33

    As a finn, I used to be depressed all the time and life was really hard. Now, really the only thing that has changed is my additude. And as a result, I don't get depressed or anxious anymore. And If I do, I actually do something about it. Life is what you make of it.

  • @lukapitkanen3333
    @lukapitkanen3333 Год назад +1084

    I think it’s easier to live up to your potential in Finland than most countries. It doesn’t matter if you come from a poor or a rich family, quality education is available to everyone and you don’t have to be in debt for the rest of your life in order to get your education. Also money is usually not a huge issue in general for people. You don’t have to be on a sigma grindset working two jobs and have 0 vacations in order to live a satisfying life.

    • @sbrod68
      @sbrod68 4 месяца назад +12

      If you have European Union passport, u can get it for free too

    • @Alex28483
      @Alex28483 4 месяца назад

      Finland opens their ass for immigrants

    • @nanashipersonne4151
      @nanashipersonne4151 4 месяца назад +9

      Also I think distribution of immigrating people is better implemented than in most countries. So it leads to less segregation.

    • @vortexdaidade
      @vortexdaidade 3 месяца назад +5

      It's also important to note that Finland is a first world country, that has access to wealth and resources since the european colonialism from the 19th century. Compared to say, South Sudan, they have it easier

    • @gizmothepiefaceman3062
      @gizmothepiefaceman3062 3 месяца назад

      Wow almost sounds like a good life for most people

  • @Gandy881
    @Gandy881 Год назад +860

    A finn here. Even though my life hasn't been easy and all that happy because of deppression and a crippling addiction to hard drugs, I can't imagine any other country (except other nordics) where i would have gotten through it alive. Because of the decisions of my government i got professional help like detox, rehab, psychiatric help and social welfare fast and for free and for that i am eternally grateful that i was born in this country. Im clean and studying now and when i graduate and get a job i'll be happy to pay those high taxes so that others in my situation may also get the help they need :)

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад +31

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @4sar123
      @4sar123 Год назад +94

      @@HereGoesKevin Not necessarily. Many other countries also have high suicide rates and similar problems among people. In many countries, it can also be unclear how many people have, for example, depression if extensive help is not offered or it is not talked about. It's not a bad thing that many go to therapy (for a variety of reasons), it might just show that the offered help is answered, making people happier. The happiest country trope is a little misleading, because obviously it doesn't entail every aspect of living, mearly the surface level: space, government support, salary, work culture, healthsystem, education, and so on.

    • @somewhat_toasty
      @somewhat_toasty Год назад +7

      good on ya man, I'll get out of this neet rut one day too, hopefully

    • @Gandy881
      @Gandy881 Год назад +2

      @@4sar123 well said

    • @thanoscube8573
      @thanoscube8573 Год назад +7

      god bless you all. wishing the best for all of ud

  • @kaden-sd6vb
    @kaden-sd6vb 3 месяца назад +27

    Suddenly it makes some sense why finnish game devs consistently make really good games

  • @lukvanleeuwen7603
    @lukvanleeuwen7603 3 месяца назад +7

    I loved how comically you told this! Very entertaining and also informative! Nice pacing (I wrote this during the ad break) and concise. Clear, logical set up that doesnt jump at strange places. Super well done!

  • @Miro.A.Mursu-
    @Miro.A.Mursu- Год назад +3374

    As a Finn. Something to learn from us is that you NEVER talk/Drink alcohol in the monday

    • @Turkwithknife
      @Turkwithknife Год назад +191

      Wdym talk alcohol?
      Edit: How tf did i get so many likes for this simple comment

    • @norrlandisawesome5794
      @norrlandisawesome5794 Год назад +77

      You are not really a Finn are you ? ;)

    • @paleoph6168
      @paleoph6168 Год назад +91

      How is it being part of a fish?

    • @Strafprozessordnung
      @Strafprozessordnung Год назад +143

      ​@@Turkwithknife maybe talking in general haha. The only finns I know are very quiet, reserved people

    • @u2beuser714
      @u2beuser714 Год назад +169

      ​@@TurkwithknifeFinnish magic they speak alcoholish and finnish

  • @Mephitinae
    @Mephitinae Год назад +605

    Europe's wooden ships were coated with "Swedish tar" back in the day, but a large portion of that was produced in Finland.

    • @highgrounder5238
      @highgrounder5238 Год назад +34

      Swedes with an accent

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад +28

      Well Finland was part of Sweden back then so it was Swedish

    • @Mephitinae
      @Mephitinae Год назад +58

      @@tj-co9go Made by Finns, sold by Swedes

    • @piuthemagicman
      @piuthemagicman Год назад +5

      Tar from my Finnish hometown of Kajaani, the tar channel is still preserved in the middle of our city here 😊

    • @kasperilindroos2370
      @kasperilindroos2370 Год назад +21

      @@highgrounder5238 Do you even know how different finnish is from swedish? They're not even in the same language family.

  • @juliakaislo1007
    @juliakaislo1007 7 месяцев назад +27

    Wow, what an insightful condensation, one word. I had never considered TRUST as an explanation to our (yes, I'm Finnish) supposed happiness, but true, it is! Being able to trust in things makes all the difference. Hard luck or bad weather or what ever it is depressing this month, you can trust there's something to be done about it or at least the weather will change eventually.
    My own thoughts on why Finland is considered the happiest country in the world is that we manage our expectations. Not having anything specific to complain about is happy enough, reasons for great joy are nice but small joys are more likely and not having big feels all the time is nothing to be negative about. We also know that while we're the poor cousins to Norway and forever feel insecure compared to Sweden, we actually have it very good and mostly just how we like it.

  • @notequalto5179
    @notequalto5179 3 месяца назад +1

    Your channel is informative and cozy at the same time. Subscribed.

  • @Wathon1884
    @Wathon1884 Год назад +362

    When I was a kid in elementary school, we were always told that "it's like winning in lottery to be born in Finland". Back then I was very naive thinking that things were like this everywhere else.
    And I completely agree on the trust aspect. It's the main pillar on which our whole country is built upon.

    • @Jusuuw
      @Jusuuw Год назад +3

      I wonder if they still say it in school

    • @poika22
      @poika22 7 месяцев назад +21

      @@Jusuuw Probably considered racist now. I was definitely told that exact phrase many times in elementary school. Then as a rebellious teen I thought it was just "trite nationalism". Now I realize it's true.

    • @fuzzer6907
      @fuzzer6907 2 месяца назад

      They say the same in Russia.
      Weird coincidence.

  • @mjr_schneider
    @mjr_schneider Год назад +658

    I think what Finland shows is that even the best organised country on Earth will still never be perfect. Hoser videos, on the other hand: immaculate.

    • @exosproudmamabear558
      @exosproudmamabear558 Год назад +26

      There is not a thing called in the world perfect but we can get close to perfect.

    • @An_Actual_Rat
      @An_Actual_Rat Год назад

      @@exosproudmamabear558 Perfection is the enemy of good. Too many people shoot for the moon when there are plenty of attainable goals for them.

    • @Piaapo
      @Piaapo Год назад +32

      We're the most organized country on Earth? Oh god, this planet is a mess.

    • @exosproudmamabear558
      @exosproudmamabear558 Год назад

      @@Piaapo Come Turkey and see how disorganisation works. Statistics all over the place no planning at all, people just go with the vibe. Traffic,city schemes are just a mess. Politics change every day. There is a disaster every 3 months. There is terorism,immigrants and depressed violent people. You can die tommorrow or you can lose all of your money in one day thats how unpredictable and unplanned it is. And there are worse countries than us can you imagine.

    • @Uah1X
      @Uah1X Год назад +9

      @@Piaapo on point

  • @YouTuber-my2ky
    @YouTuber-my2ky 3 месяца назад +1

    I love the tone of the video... it's amusing and informative!

  • @cinnamonisnice_
    @cinnamonisnice_ 2 месяца назад +1

    Your channel is so underrated, honestly love your videos!!

  • @elkku2934
    @elkku2934 Год назад +2203

    I live in Finland and I have no idea how Finland could be even close to be the happiest country :D

    • @frankandmike9805
      @frankandmike9805 Год назад +283

      As someone who lives in the US I could definitely see it

    • @ComradeAart
      @ComradeAart Год назад

      The rest of the world sucks more

    • @someguyfromfinlandtj125
      @someguyfromfinlandtj125 Год назад +490

      When things are well you don’t apreciate it like you would when things are bad. I think we take everything for granted.

    • @DissonantSynth
      @DissonantSynth Год назад +234

      You should spend an hour in South Africa, then you'll become more grateful for your amazing country and government.

    • @felixuu
      @felixuu Год назад +112

      it's just that the criteria they use in these statistics don't really reflect our subjective reality/feelings. If I had to guess which European country has most overall satisfaction in their day-to-day life, I would say Spain.

  • @MrNommerz
    @MrNommerz Год назад +520

    As someone who is Canadian and lives in Canada but has Finnish parents on both sides and visited Finland many times, I have some insight into why they may be the happiest country. Like you said, it is trust, but to be more specific it is that you will be cared for as an individual no matter what. Even if you do nothing, abuse drugs, don't work, whatever; you still receive the same free healthcare, education, mental health treatment, place to live, and training to become something. It really makes you believe in your country and countryman.
    The trust factor also comes in how they speak. I've been to other parts of Europe and NA/SA, and everyone spoke the same way except in Finland. They say as much as possible in as few words as possible. It makes them impossible to lie to. Too many words or too few details, they will know you are lying, and ask question until everything is clear. It is almost like they subconsciously interrogating you, like you are always talking to your parents. I have never felt this way anywhere else, but every time I return to Finland I remember I'm speaking to icemen. It's not that you have to speak carefully, it's that you have to speak sufficiently.

    • @holoholopainen1627
      @holoholopainen1627 Год назад +16

      This speaking to Finns - IS much easier - When talking suomi ! How IS Your suomi or svenska ? You cant blame anyone - not knowing English or French ?

    • @MrNommerz
      @MrNommerz Год назад +17

      @@holoholopainen1627 Definitely my Fin is dog shit, but even where people only spoke Spanish, or in Holland, or in Sweden, it was not the same. I am not blaming anyone, every people is different. I love visiting Finland, but every time I go it is jarring. Of course not everyone in a country is the same either, but even though my relatives lived in NA and speak good english it is always something I notice when I visit them. I have no issue with it, I appreciate their honesty. It is refreshing when you live so close to the US.

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад +14

      ​@@MrNommerzThis video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @MrNommerz
      @MrNommerz Год назад +37

      @@HereGoesKevin That's why I said "may be" because frankly measuring happiness isn't really possible and is kind of stupid.

    • @vilhoeriksson
      @vilhoeriksson Год назад +24

      ​@@HereGoesKevin remember that everyone lives in their own little bubble.. I myself have some mental problems but in finland it doesnt matter that you have.. everyone is equal here.

  • @Ajsandborg
    @Ajsandborg 4 месяца назад +33

    I've seen a lot of news on Finnish media about these studies because most people living here seemed somewhat surprised about this and it's sort of a joke to many people considering our high suicide rates. I reckon the biggest takeaway from that conversation was basically that we feel "contentment" rather than outright happiness as most people would understand it. If you just ask people how many times they've felt happy in the last month, Finland doesn't come close to being the happiest country, i think Uruguay was on top of that list so we don't actually feel happiness all that often. The study instead combined multiple different elements that it considered happiness to consist of and on that basis Finland was the happiest. To me that makes perfect sense, there's more of a "it is what it is" kinda culture here thats more of a stable, comfortable grey feeling rather than an ecstatic happiness kind of feeling. When you think of a happy nationality, a finn is probably not what comes to anyones mind, we're not particularily outgoing or extroverted and seeing outward expressions of happiness is quite rare here in my opinion, and that is immediately noticeable when i travel abroad.
    Just wanted to share this because when the study first came out, i was really interested in why do finnish people generally have sort of a grumpy vibe if we're so happy all the time.

  • @inertia179
    @inertia179 4 месяца назад +11

    I love the country animals you made. They are so cute!

  • @Ryanandboys
    @Ryanandboys Год назад +666

    My mom is 100% Finn and I was raised mostly by her and my grandpa and I think one part I don't think you covered was the culture of Sisu and to keep your feelings to yourself.
    My dad's side of the family is all French and the cultures couldn't be more different. French culture is very outgoing flamboyant and dramatic and when they have a problem or criticism they make sure everyone knows and it's always someone else's fault, and it's seems as being sophisticated to not be happy, where as in Finnish culture it's very quite, reserved and stoic and it's normal to say your happy and looked down if your complaining and blaming it on other people.

    • @overlord3481
      @overlord3481 Год назад

      "quiet, reserved, and stoic" So Finnish people don't have culture, is this what I'm gathering?

    • @KyaneOficial
      @KyaneOficial Год назад +99

      Yes, it seems that when the survey was on going, the finnish went for the humility answer and said they are happy, but this culture and the suicide rate points to something darker.

    • @kala5882
      @kala5882 Год назад +91

      Finnish people will not say they are happy if they aren't. It's more that they just tend not to complain.
      In other countries the culture of having to be outwardly happy always and just answering "fine", "good" etc. instead of saying the truth when asked how you are is much more prevalent.
      This Finnish way of not pretending to be happy is said to be better when you are sad or depressed, because you don't feel like you are the only one not feeling good.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад +56

      I think Finnish culture is changing for an even healthier direction with our current generation and the following (I was born in the 90's). The youngsters are more emotionally expressive and empathetic, but not at the expence of being overtly loud, emotional or flamboyant. Most are ambitious and take their life seriously, though not forgetting to have fun. Although I see more and more people just being tired and burned out by work and school. We are a heavily responsibility-oriented culture
      I think our definition of happiness is quite modest and minimal. We like to be frugal and satisfied with little. As long as we have a roof on top of us, warm food and drinks, our basic needs satisfied, Finns would often say they are content and happy with their life, even if otherwise you woild say they are constantly sad or depressed.

    • @8is
      @8is Год назад +21

      @@KyaneOficial What you're describing is more akin to latin America than Finland. That's where you'll find the happiest and least happiest people since they aren't actually the happiest but they have a culture of saying they're the happiest. If you ask a Finn whether they're happy or not, they'll just feel fine and satisfied. That's because Finns don't have to deal corruption, feeling unsafe, being poor, etc. which simply isn't true for most of the world, at least not the same extent as in the nordics.

  • @WaliSiddiq
    @WaliSiddiq Год назад +2006

    I wonder if their happiness has anything to do with Finland having the world's highest annual consumption of milk per capita 🤔

    • @Chironex_Fleckeri
      @Chironex_Fleckeri Год назад +405

      Chocolate, milk, and saunas. It's a holy trinity of happiness. We've solved it

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Год назад +19

      considering their population is very low, its not that hard.

    • @solidsnake5051
      @solidsnake5051 Год назад +62

      it's coffee, we love that stuff over here.

    • @exosproudmamabear558
      @exosproudmamabear558 Год назад +13

      I dont think so since milk isnt really nutritious nor good for anything except for sweets. Also high milk consumption causes digestive problems,parasites(They like milk a lot),low calcium(since milk has high potasium and calcium binds calcium) plus high iodine inside causes throid damage especially people with throid autoimmun idseases such as hasimato,graves etc. So keeping cow milk consumption is a good idea.

    • @adrianaslund8605
      @adrianaslund8605 Год назад

      That's just because Nordics are the least lactose intolerant in the world. Its like the worlds lamest x-man superpower. The andeans have superior oxygen metabolism and we can drink milk.

  • @amyheart5567
    @amyheart5567 4 месяца назад +8

    I’m hearing people aren’t overworked amd have time to connect to nature. That’s the dream!

  • @madeiraislander
    @madeiraislander 2 месяца назад +8

    2:56 Portuguese are never late, nor are we early. We arrive precisely when we mean to!

  • @ghostninja0105
    @ghostninja0105 10 месяцев назад +210

    I lived in Jyvaskyla as an exchange student for a while and i have to say Finland is a beautiful country with great nature and public facilities. In that period i visited many places and I absolutely fell in love with the country. The one thing I, and literally every other exchange student, had problems with was the lack of daylight. At the shortest days we only had a couple hours of daylight. Not sunlight, we did not see the sun for weeks at a time. From asking around we all had problems with our biological clock and we did start feeling a bit more "down".

    • @adieuuuu
      @adieuuuu 7 месяцев назад +10

      Yeah i love winter, but hate those everlasting nights....

    • @spacecreature6849
      @spacecreature6849 9 дней назад

      Yup I always get ’seasonal depression’ from the darkness. It makes me feel tired all the time and that life’s hardships are two times worse even though they really aren’t.

  • @pique3124
    @pique3124 Год назад +357

    As a Finn, one of the less talked about things that make me happy, is that I can really trust not only the ones in power e.g. the police, but also average people.
    If I lose my wallet in the city, I'm almost certain someone's going to return it. And in general people just seem to trust strangers easier than in the US (besides from Helsinki)

    • @geleiou
      @geleiou Год назад

      Thats another world to me.. Im a German-Born Brazilian and i cant trust literally no one here, its 99% chances of them not returning, plus using my numbers to do banking-type theft. Its everyone on their own for survival on South America, this place will NEVER turn out good and work out.

    • @DissonantSynth
      @DissonantSynth Год назад +12

      I'm from South Africa. It's the crime capital of the world.

    • @zacharym4592
      @zacharym4592 Год назад +3

      That's also true with many places in the US, it really depends on the city

    • @aquilae1670
      @aquilae1670 Год назад +1

      y u guyz introverts tho

    • @jarskii11
      @jarskii11 Год назад +59

      @@aquilae1670 You only speak when you have to. That means you mean what you say

  • @jujuoof174
    @jujuoof174 Месяц назад +1

    Super well explained, I learned a lot!

  • @vladislavkaras491
    @vladislavkaras491 3 месяца назад +1

    After that video, I thought being exchange student is extra stress, but now I really want to visit Finland! :D
    Thanks for the video!

  • @taahaseois.8898
    @taahaseois.8898 Год назад +416

    Not the most accurate video about our country but it was entertaining. We did receive some money from the US during all of the marshall aid stuff, but it was kept hidden. Tar was also a pretty big export, I believe mainly to England for their ships. Also just because we are labeled happy, it doesn't mean that we are actually happy. My social studies / history teacher once said that Finland is not the happiest country, but instead the most satisfied one. Also the depression part was not only tied to the Soviet Union collapsing even though it was one of the reasons (it started before that). Banks just gave out a lot of bad loans. Aaaand Nato is definetly not the only source of defense for Finland. We have a very functioning defence force.

    • @Jobor2
      @Jobor2 Год назад +2

      That's correct

    • @n1ckster055
      @n1ckster055 Год назад +13

      Yes a capable defense force but not massive

    • @hydrolifetech7911
      @hydrolifetech7911 Год назад +33

      @@n1ckster055 still fit for purpose given the capability the Russians are displaying in Ukraine. The Finns have the best intelligence on Russia's capabilities and know they can defend themselves against Russia minus the nukes. Even for the nukes, they are quite prepared with enough well-equipped bunkers to shelter their entire population and some change while their forces defend against subsequent land invasion.

    • @Handle0108
      @Handle0108 Год назад +2

      @@hydrolifetech7911 yeah, they are prepared, but they stand no chance. They are much smaller than Ukraine and have way less people. Their capital is also more exposed and very close to the Russian border.

    • @taahaseois.8898
      @taahaseois.8898 Год назад +17

      @@Handle0108 I'd say there's a chance. ~80% of Finland is forest and we also have a lot of lakes. In the worst case scenario we have around 1 million people who have gone through military training.

  • @Tyrgalon
    @Tyrgalon Год назад +62

    They should change the name of the "happiness" survey into "contentment" because thats fundamentally whats at play here, Finnish people are content because they feel safe knowing they can TRUST people around them and the government to help them out if things go badly.
    The safety that arrises from that knowledge is also what creates said trust in thew first place.

  • @nunomartins97
    @nunomartins97 3 месяца назад +8

    It's hilarious how he put Portugal for "don't show up late" because we literally have a thing where you're allowed to show up 10 minutes late to the first class in the morning and the first class in the afternoon 😂😂

  • @SuperFrodo95
    @SuperFrodo95 3 месяца назад +1

    I have flown with Finnair from Australia to Poland a couple times now and they easily have my favourite airport now. Helsinki airport is open with some lovely shops and lots of cafes and restaurants. Best of all they have padded benches instead of seats so you can lay down, with more than enough power points. I do wish they had thicker padding, but it's still way more effort than the other airports make. The staff are also friendly and easy-going.

  • @mehmarcus1995
    @mehmarcus1995 Год назад +123

    Finland also have the highest F1 driver champions and winners to population ratio, even when compared to F1 champion juggernauts like the UK and Germany

    • @WhatSaab
      @WhatSaab Год назад +3

      I need gloves and steering wheel

    • @juhotuho10
      @juhotuho10 Год назад +21

      Finland is a weird place of champions considering how small the country is
      Best hockey team: Finnish
      The best F1 driver: Finnish
      the best Starcraft 2 player: Finnish
      one of the best dota 2 players: Finnish
      the best Age of Empires 2 player: Finnish
      These are only the ones i'm aware of

    • @KoteDarasuum
      @KoteDarasuum Год назад +16

      @@juhotuho10 most WRC winners per capita are Finnish, and youngest WRC champion is Kalle Rovanperä

    • @Settiis
      @Settiis Год назад +10

      @@juhotuho10It’s because our hobbies are limited by our environment. Winter sports, driving and maybe hiking is what you can do outside, other that you can stay inside and read a book or play video games.

    • @lordsupasta
      @lordsupasta Год назад +1

      @@juhotuho10 Woah woah woah I think the Canadians still hold the title for best hockey team

  • @azore1184
    @azore1184 Год назад +157

    I think the harshness of the weather provides a contrast in life. Many unhappy people are stuck in complete and utter monotony. By having a harsh environment, it allows people to appreciate good things far more.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад +34

      That's probably also one reason for the Finns hardiness, frugality, modesty, desire to survive and save for the future. On the contrary, the reason for their communality and empathy, too.
      In the south, you might survive even without shelter and plants and animals may grow year round. Here you will freeze to death, unless you plan for the winter and if you don't have a warm place to live. So people aren't left behind so easily, as it would be more brutal for them.

    • @Uah1X
      @Uah1X Год назад +1

      @@omenapiiras nah but the fact that it's literally dark in the winter at 3-4pm for months n months n months is annoying, all though that just makes us appreciate summer a lot more

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @SpaceMonkeyMDV
      @SpaceMonkeyMDV Год назад

      @@HereGoesKevin are you really going around replying to every comment because you dont like finland being called the happiest country. It has lower suicide rate than south africa,Russia, the US, South Korea.

  • @ImNotKriss
    @ImNotKriss 10 месяцев назад +4

    FINALLY I'm getting Finland video recommendations

  • @backup7186
    @backup7186 9 месяцев назад +5

    Love the cute animals used to rep each country. Great video. Convinced me to live in at least western europe at least once in my life lol

  • @jannek5757
    @jannek5757 Год назад +105

    About the wood burning as energy.:
    Not too many large plants use wood in heat/electricity production but it is very common in household use.
    It is quite often the "secondary" system to heat OR to cut down heating expenses during cold times.
    Firewood has typically a very good availabilty. It also brings some security in winter, that you can use 2 systems for heating.

    • @Pan_Z
      @Pan_Z 11 месяцев назад +1

      Wood burning, however, is both horribly inefficient and bad for the environment & occupants. It seems Finland, like much of Europe, was over reliant on Russian gas.

    • @pigeonandpigeon3158
      @pigeonandpigeon3158 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@Pan_Z bad for the occupants?

    • @cn2673
      @cn2673 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@Pan_Zon a residential basis woodburning isn’t harmful for the environment….it’s quite neutral for it actually.

    • @nipander11
      @nipander11 10 месяцев назад +7

      ​​​@@Pan_ZNatural Gas made up around 5% of the Finnish energy mix pre Ukraine and 3% post Ukraine, so we definitely aren't over reliant on that. I think we just replaced the little gas that some industries need with LNG via the baltic link.
      Very few places use gas. Most buildings are warmed by district heating or ground heat. 3 biggest electricity generation methods in 2022 were Renewables at around 42% Nuclear at around 21% and Oil at just under 20% . We are still Net energy importers though and import around 3% of our electricity from other countries in the European electricity grid (Mainly Sweden) rather than using more polluting power plants like coal or oil. We do have excess capacity though so incase of peaking European demand or high import costs those powerplants can switch on.
      Also Finland has the most forest cover percentage of any European country and it actually went up last year. By law you must replant trees when you cut them down for industry unless you have explicit permission. Many ordinary people own parts of industrial forests and let bigger companies handle the logging and collect a nice paycheck every 20 or so years. And summerhouses, which most Finnish families have, are usually somewhat old fashioned and may be heated with wood.
      I have no idea what all the "Wood related fuels" cover though as it's not explained on the narional statistics page. Kind of surprising it is that big but unfortunately we don't get a lot of wind and also we meed to upgrade the western energy grid to handle the fluxuating loads from wind energy before we can add more. Wood fireplaces are banned in cities though, not that pollution is a problem here.

    • @kat4428
      @kat4428 8 месяцев назад +4

      Since forestry is still one of the largest industries (paper is dead, but cardboard is doing better than ever, lumber is always needed) in Finland, it generates a lot of energy biomass as a by-product (black liquor, sawdust and wood chips, treebark, branches and tops, sometimes stumps) which make up most of the wood material that is burned for energy. I think that most (if not all) pulp mills also generate electricity, for their own use but they also sell it to the power grid. Private households with fire places actually make a rather small portion of the energy generated by wood burning.

  • @morko5422
    @morko5422 Год назад +52

    12:10 Finland doesn't use wood to make electricity, it's energy consumption not electricity consumption. The reason why 30% of Finland's energy is from wood sources is due to heating, most of the houses are old and don't have modern electric heaters or air conditioning. Also wood is cheap and self-sufficient.

    • @klapiroska4714
      @klapiroska4714 Год назад +4

      Wood chips are an increasingly common way to replace coal, oil and peat fired powerplants from the district heating systems. As you mentioned, wood is often burned in a fire place, especially during the winter in buildings that are not connected to district heating systems, and use electricity (direct or heat pump) for heating. The idea being, that burning some wood once a day can significantly lower your electricity bill. Sauna is also a thing, and it is traditionally heated with wood.

    • @kokkelisk1989
      @kokkelisk1989 Год назад +2

      It does. Finland uses trees crust produced as a byproduct in the wood industry as fuel producing electricity and district heating. For example in Oulun Energia.

    • @plasmakitten4261
      @plasmakitten4261 10 месяцев назад

      When you say self sufficient... are you out there chopping down and replanting trees for your fireplaces?

    • @klapiroska4714
      @klapiroska4714 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@plasmakitten4261 Not everyone is doing that themselves, though many people like me do cut the firewood for fireplaces and saunas from their own property. Other people choose to pay companies to do effectively the same thing at an industrial scale.
      Amount of wood in the forests and the annual growth rate are difficult to estimate, but it's safe to say that the annual growth rate is around 100 million m^3, so as long as the amount harvested is equal or smaller than that, wood is self-sufficient on the country-level.

    • @diamondsarenotforever8542
      @diamondsarenotforever8542 9 месяцев назад +1

      Even the old houses have got central heating, district heating or geothermal heating. Finland is a very advanced and modern country.

  • @Dave_Sisson
    @Dave_Sisson 2 месяца назад +3

    The picture of a library at 8:34 is in Melbourne, Australia, which is about as far from Finland as you can get.

  • @Moonstone-Redux
    @Moonstone-Redux 3 месяца назад +3

    So I just came back from Finland and it is really interesting to be in a country with almost the same population as yours (Singapore) yet be so many more times larger.
    There is a lot of natural beauty to be seen in Finland, and it's really one of the countries I wouldn't mind living in, the cold notwithstanding. Though staying for nearly a week north of the Arctic circle in the deepest part of winter will make you worship the mysterious glowing sky orb when you return home. That's the one thing I don't miss about Finland.

    • @xItzSpruce
      @xItzSpruce Месяц назад +1

      I live in Finland. And i see that dome effect thingy right when i step outside

  • @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591
    @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591 Год назад +51

    Loved the small reference to Portugal at 2:58 🤣🤣 yeah, portuguese are known to be late to everything ahaha

    • @prototypista
      @prototypista Год назад +4

      Portuguese? Nah. We brazilians are much worse.

    • @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591
      @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591 Год назад +13

      @@prototypista it's what unites us ahaha lusophones together in everything 🇵🇹🤝🇧🇷

    • @someguyfromfinlandtj125
      @someguyfromfinlandtj125 Год назад +10

      I was 10 minutes late for work, I felt like I failed my workpartners and my country.

    • @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591
      @rafaelpaulinoferreira8591 Год назад

      @@someguyfromfinlandtj125 that's how Finland works ahaha 🇫🇮

    • @danielsurvivor1372
      @danielsurvivor1372 Год назад

      ​@@rafaelpaulinoferreira8591 lusophones?

  • @MrKruger88
    @MrKruger88 Год назад +36

    The thing about cold countries being happy is only loosely related to the weather.
    Very cold countries are, by necessity, very wealthy and have a lot of social safety nets in place. So we have a very high standard of living and we take care of the poorest people very well.

    • @NatJuno
      @NatJuno 9 месяцев назад +3

      I like to joke that people in cold climates have warmer personalities and vice versa to cope with the weather

    • @Hungabrigoo
      @Hungabrigoo 3 месяца назад +1

      Countries of cold climate usually have low population density and large amounts of natural resources, which results in very high per capita wealth. That can be used to support generous welfare states which would be impossible in most places.
      Also it is not secret that rural life is better for your mental health that urban one.

    • @pohjanvanamo
      @pohjanvanamo 3 месяца назад

      I also think that cold climate repels laziness. Survival needs more effort, it's not about wanting to do things, it's more like do or die. And think about the future, at least the next winter. And in centuries and millenia, these things engrave into people. Idk, not sure though... I do find it annoying though xD
      Also about helping neighbours... there's a famous story/poem? about a man and his wife, who had bad years of harvest, so they mixed edible part of tree to their breads. Then they had a good year, and the wife wanted to make all-grain-bread, and the man still said, to put half of the tree stuff into the bread, their neighbour had a bad harvest. 🤭
      So... gotta do stuff and gotta help the next guy. Idk, it's winter, it's night, and I just want to sleep my troubles away. 😴

  • @N20006
    @N20006 3 месяца назад +3

    Finland is indeed a beautiful country with lovely people! I had two online friends from Finland. They are both so respectful,kind and humble!!! Definitely visit this wonderful country someday!!! I love Finnish people and they're culture of happiness:)

  • @albertpampalonalisnenko8389
    @albertpampalonalisnenko8389 Месяц назад +2

    This video is an absolute masterpiece.

  • @laurivirtanen8636
    @laurivirtanen8636 Год назад +19

    2:42 the place is called fat fish lakes for anyone wandering. Also the sign has two languages on top is Finnish and bottom is some dialect of Sami

    • @Vuosta
      @Vuosta Год назад +4

      It's northern Sami

  • @Cutpurse3
    @Cutpurse3 Год назад +136

    I think you should have better explained that the ~56% personal income tax rate is only the top bracket.
    Earning 0-19900EUR annually (up to ~20k USD) gives you 0% personal income tax rate
    19900-29700 is 19%
    29700-49000 is ~30%
    49000-85800 is ~34%
    and then anything over 85 800 EUR (92570 USD) is taxed at 56%
    So I'd say thats a pretty sweet deal considering all of the social services offered by the country
    Then there's local income taxes, but that's another deal

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад +6

      Capital gains taxes are lower and are 34% at the highest. In practice they are usually a few percents lower than that. But they start at 30% (though in practice often 25% or lower)

    • @swtrooper42
      @swtrooper42 Год назад +25

      Everyone always seems to forget about income brackets when discussing taxes.

    • @fredsleftnut6394
      @fredsleftnut6394 Год назад +6

      Those are some pretty outrageous taxes

    • @Settiis
      @Settiis Год назад +18

      56% tax is definitely not a sweet deal. It drives wealth away from the country because most people who are capable of producing such revenue streams are also capable of moving their business elsewhere so they can make more money.

    • @klapiroska4714
      @klapiroska4714 Год назад +8

      Yes, 56% is for quite wealthy people, but even if you are making 19k€ per year (which is very much on the low end), you still end up paying a small income tax (something like 3%). Besides that, everyone (who work for someone and get a salary) have tax-like deductions to their paycheck. These are mainly unemployment and pention securities (you cannot opt out), which add up roughly to 10(ish)%. Since the workforce is highly unionised, you are likely to pay union membership fee, which is often about 1% of your salary.
      Tax brackets make determining the tax rates more complicated, but the average tax (and tax-like expence) rate in Finland in 2022 was 43,2%. Before you gasp how much that is, you need to have a look at what you get in return. Free education, social securities, free/cheap healthcare, security etc. In many other countries, these things are not covered with your tax money, but you have to pay tuition fees, insurances, private unemployment funds and pention plans etc. Don't get me wrong, finns do pay for private pention plans and insurances, but I guarantee that on average we spend quite a bit less on them than people in some other countries do.

  • @Ur_Average_serb
    @Ur_Average_serb 4 месяца назад +2

    Wow, this makes me wanna move to Finland, it sounds amazing

  • @Agent-nj6wn
    @Agent-nj6wn Месяц назад

    Ok, usually I just skip sponsor sections but this was so well done I had to play it through. Not that it does much to his wallet but it is all about my respect!

  • @pepisman
    @pepisman Год назад +14

    3:36 I'm actually from Detroit and this made me laugh

    • @skoorbal3173
      @skoorbal3173 Год назад +6

      "where was I gonna go? Detroit?"
      Nice to see a fellow Michigander in these comments. Not from Detroit, but I've always loved visiting Motown USA.

  • @kapoink835
    @kapoink835 Год назад +65

    While the key message of this video, the idea of trust being the very foundation of happiness, is correct I would like to remind you that trust without reason is even worse than not trusting at all. If you just blindly trust a person, organization or movement, you can easily be taken advantage of. Trust only works in Finland, because it has been observed working, and the subjects of trust are actually trustworthy. As you touched on in the video, trust must be gradually built, it doesn't come quick or for free, and it can be easily broken. Once you have attained it though it is more than worth it.

    • @Sombody123
      @Sombody123 Год назад +3

      Well, Finland does often find themselves on the short end of EU's damaging policies and being the paypig for others, much to their frustration...

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад +1

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @dazeen9591
      @dazeen9591 Год назад +1

      Trust doesn't work in Finland. Ignorance is bliss and only the dumb people here are happy since they don't know any better but to trust blindly and stay oblivious to all the flaws.

    • @cassu6
      @cassu6 Год назад

      @@HereGoesKevin Kevin your imaginary girlfriend is a bozo. End of story

    • @MaelPlaguecrow6942
      @MaelPlaguecrow6942 10 месяцев назад

      Wait a minute, so you mean to tell us that a government that puts people over profit and makes sure their citizens live comfortable lives will generally be more like by the people in question?

  • @ThePolkadog
    @ThePolkadog 9 дней назад

    I really love how you represent the countries with their animals and flags it's so simple but so effective and cute

  • @guardianofthetoasters2323
    @guardianofthetoasters2323 5 месяцев назад +9

    I really want to live in Finland someday. Never had a winter here and always wanted to live in a land of snow. Just need to finish my college degree, get some exp, money and planning, and I'll be living there till the day I die. I just hope I can find a reliable connection there because starting from scratch would be hard

    • @ellaalisaq
      @ellaalisaq 2 дня назад

      Vinter here is cool but let me tell, finnish summer is one of the best things in my life

  • @cspaliwal_
    @cspaliwal_ Год назад +293

    fun fact: India is apparently unhappier than war-ridden Ukraine.
    happiness is an abstract idea that can't be measured by wierd survey so they use metrics like corruption etc.

    • @dinte215
      @dinte215 Год назад +34

      i was surprised to see gay rights, corruption, electricity and a plethora of other things that have nothing to do with peoples feelings.

    • @villepusa7873
      @villepusa7873 Год назад +107

      @@dinte215 You know, gay rights might make gays happy.

    • @YourSocialistAutomaton
      @YourSocialistAutomaton Год назад

      ​@@villepusa7873 who cares about inferior people?

    • @somekindofdude1130
      @somekindofdude1130 Год назад

      How can u be happy in india?
      Social class warfare, descrimination based on religion and race, huge economic gaps, cities with buildings build on top of buildings, polluted water, china barking, water "insecurity", pseudo-democracy, extreme push for high levels of education just to stay unemployed or have a lower salary than most other countries.....
      On tge other hand Ukrainians have a purpose, defending their homes and purpose brings happiness for many

    • @8is
      @8is Год назад +55

      @@villepusa7873 I mean, that's less than 2% of the worldwide population. Sure, you could bump up the happiness index by like... 2%.

  • @TooLoLish
    @TooLoLish Год назад +53

    it is very worth noting that the typical surveys that are used for these statistics, base the understanding of "happiness" on the old Greek word "Eudaimonia". The word is often translated into English as "happiness", but it would actually be more appropriate to translate it into something along the lines of "Living well with what you have and being content".
    I am from Denmark, and have visited my northern european neighbours frequently in my life. And one thing is for certain; Northern European peoples for sure are the most content people on earth.

  • @toukopaavolainen3566
    @toukopaavolainen3566 9 месяцев назад

    For anyone wondering about that example of finnish language, it is a road sign with a places name on it. The name translates to "Fatfish Lakes" and lower half of it is whatever you call saame.

  • @smellthel
    @smellthel 6 месяцев назад +4

    8:59 I love how Finland has a DS

  • @lucianoosorio5942
    @lucianoosorio5942 Год назад +417

    “The Soviet Union’s war against Finland should’ve been easy victory but it became a humiliating struggle and their military eniptitude was put on full display. In the end they did force the Finns to sue for peace. Then they continue their honorable campaign on pushing much smaller countries by annexing the Baltic states and part of Northern Romania.”

  • @jukkaahonen6557
    @jukkaahonen6557 Год назад +104

    I think the word "trust" says a lot about what is meant by Finland being the "happiest" country. It's about stability. But we are not very social or smiling all the time. This is a peaceful and stable country, but that's not all you need for happiness. Good relationships and cheerfulness are also needed, and I don't think we do well in those.

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад +6

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @dazeen9591
      @dazeen9591 Год назад

      I don't trust this nation one bit lol.

    • @AaroRissanen-pi4td
      @AaroRissanen-pi4td Год назад

      @@dazeen9591 Why?

    • @ninjal7588
      @ninjal7588 Год назад

      @@HereGoesKevin This is not based on a survey asking "are you happy?", it is based by tons of small things such as economical security, access to healthcare and education, poverty rate, equality etc. Has anyone actually read the world happiness report? All youth in developed nations are generally unhappy because the news are saying the end is near, housing crisis, social media, crime, climate change, pricing are going up, wages are low, boomers will use up all the retirement funds etc. Only those who are blissfully ignorant and can stay focused on their own life in a bubble are happy now.

    • @Tovalokodonc
      @Tovalokodonc Год назад

      ​@@dazeen9591 You're so obnoxious kid

  • @michime7860
    @michime7860 3 месяца назад +5

    The polar bear is so cute❤❤❤

  • @SAYLAMASK
    @SAYLAMASK 2 месяца назад +1

    I have a ton of finnish heritage! It comes from my dads side. I was born in maine and i live in maine to this day. Also the polar bear drawing is adorable 😊

  • @matyasfukk3270
    @matyasfukk3270 Год назад +11

    This was actually a very very informative video. your other ones are also informative, but I always hear that finland is the happiest, but never why.

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @matyasfukk3270
      @matyasfukk3270 10 месяцев назад

      @@HereGoesKevin Idk man, the metrics say that

  • @Loonza123
    @Loonza123 5 месяцев назад +1

    “And stepping outside and getting immediately shot” sent me to tears bro 😂😂😂 3:35

  • @JessicaMorgani
    @JessicaMorgani 2 месяца назад

    Great stuff!

  • @sammalsikuri3828
    @sammalsikuri3828 Год назад +7

    Love how the picture you used at the beginning for the bright summer nights isn't even that bright lol. Southern Finland may get one night of 24/7 sunlight but come to Lapland and it becomes a month at minimum, so compared to that the picture you showed is really dark - in the summer I barely have to use any lights inside no matter the time of day.
    Also, the image at 2:42 shows the place name in two languages: the one above in Finnish, and the one below in Sami. Southern Finland has place names in Swedish and Finnish, where as in Inari and above in Lapland the place names are written in Finnish and Sami (do note that there isn't just one Sami language, so it's just written in the most common one for the area I believe).
    As for the wood as an energy/heat source: 1999 had an exceptionally cold winter week where temperatures in Lapland went down as much as -45° to -50°C (-49° to -58°F). The following summer had an increase in people building fireplaces in their homes, understandably so. (As this was before my time, anyone who remembers more about it feel free to add anything.) Don't know if that is partly the reason, but I know for sure my parents heat the house using their fireplace in the winter on top of having electricity.

  • @Pasakid
    @Pasakid Год назад +85

    This was a very informative and accurate video. I'm glad you also mentioned our shortcomings, since we're not perfect and we are going through an economic "crisis" at the moment. Greetings from Finland!

    • @HereGoesKevin
      @HereGoesKevin Год назад

      This video has to be very inaccurate because my girlfriend is Finnish and she told me many younger Finnish people struggle with depression and isolation it is also normal for people from Finland to go to therapy, she goes to therapy as well and she is recovering from depression. The suicide rate over there is also high, so there is really something wrong with calling Finland as the happiest country...

    • @Pasakid
      @Pasakid Год назад +2

      @@HereGoesKevin I can tell you as a Finn that this is quite an accurate video. Sure, it's not perfect but it's better than the other videos similar to this. Finland has had a high suicide rate but it has gone down since the 90's and now is on par with the rest of the EU. The importance on mental health has been a popular topic among the now-ongoing parliamentary elections with many candidates having the topic of mental health as one of the key elements in their respective campaigns.
      It also helps that seeking help for mental illnesses here is socially acceptable unlike in other countries and you can recieve help and medication quite easily.
      The whole 'Finland is the world's happiest country' is skewed. We Finns are not generally the happiest in terms of emotions but we are content and satisfied with our lives. The world happiness report takes into account more of institutions and not the general populace.

    • @Pasakid
      @Pasakid Год назад +2

      @@HereGoesKevin Also isn't it good that it is normal to get help if you are mentally unwell? It helps them reintegrate back to work and it decreases suicide rates.

    • @butterflies655
      @butterflies655 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@HereGoesKevinStop repeating those lies.

  • @ihmisjonne3512
    @ihmisjonne3512 7 месяцев назад +1

    You know this video Hurt my heart bc i live in finland it really hurt😢

  • @StarLifeZz619
    @StarLifeZz619 Год назад +5

    Finally h0ser uploads

  • @kaisla_onerva
    @kaisla_onerva Год назад +5

    3:37 "sometimes ugly but safe" IM DEAD💀💀💀thats true tho

  • @logosfabula
    @logosfabula 2 месяца назад

    Love your channel!

  • @mephistopan6638
    @mephistopan6638 Месяц назад

    2:57 That part with referencing Portugal was funny af 😆I'm from Portugal and believe me when I say we wouldn't be just 1 minute late, it would be a minimum of half an hour.

  • @Tanderiki
    @Tanderiki Год назад +338

    As a Finn, i can confirm that our happiness comes from trust in the government.
    I have a nuclear bunker in my basement no joke
    Edit: Sauna.

    • @widodoakrom3938
      @widodoakrom3938 Год назад +3

      Lol

    • @anonymoust2877
      @anonymoust2877 Год назад +4

      Are you really being serious?

    • @kasperilindroos2370
      @kasperilindroos2370 Год назад +111

      @@anonymoust2877 Yes he is. Most big buildings, like apartment buildings for an example, must have a nuclear bunker. It's literally the law. That's because of our history with Russia. In Helsinki there are complete networks of nuclear bunkers under the city.

    • @noobgun12
      @noobgun12 Год назад

      Literally no Finn ever would trust the goverment anymore so you are so full of shit

    • @Heavysweating
      @Heavysweating Год назад +6

      @@kasperilindroos2370 Pretty sure most of the housing complex's bunkers are meant to withstand regular bombing instead of a nuclear though

  • @justathought4914
    @justathought4914 Год назад +35

    About climate thing. Yeah winter can feel long, cold and harsh but that just makes spring/summer more amazing. I personally really like that we have 4 real seasons that feel different from each other. My favorite season is summer but I wouldn"t like to live in country where is hot all the time. There are different traditions and hobbys to do every season so it is nice change of pace time to time.

  • @project_X_design
    @project_X_design 9 месяцев назад +12

    Finland is simply a beautiful place full of forest people. I will go there someday

  • @arthurg1425
    @arthurg1425 2 месяца назад +1

    In places that get this cold and dark, comfort is of high importance.
    Warmth, company, alcohol, candy, death metal, whatever gets them through. Seasons are powerful & sometimes all you can do is be content.
    I don't know that well, but people seem kinder in cold places. But the potential for isolation it causes isn't always good.

  • @michaeldelisieux5252
    @michaeldelisieux5252 Год назад +5

    Just exceptional! Light and with a very dense content. Exceptional formula. Kudos!

  • @Strafprozessordnung
    @Strafprozessordnung Год назад +7

    Imo it's sauna and the trees you mentioned. I'm also really happy that my city has more trees than inhabitants and going to a sauna regularly is a gamechanger, try it.

  • @NSASpyVan
    @NSASpyVan 4 месяца назад +1

    Remedy is a video game developer from Finland and they make amazing games. Max Payne, Alan Wake, Control, the one game with Iceman from Xmen

  • @winstanudjaja
    @winstanudjaja 3 месяца назад

    11:05 that's a good mockery and slaps pretty hard

  • @caffeinefuelledgamerboi865
    @caffeinefuelledgamerboi865 Год назад +10

    No way I just finished a 3000 word geography essay on the World Population Review and geographic happiness just to see you made a video on it.

  • @billmacia4092
    @billmacia4092 Год назад +31

    Pass 5-6 month each year during winter and you will find all the small thing in life that can make you happy. Nordic life in a nutshell.

    • @jooseppi4728
      @jooseppi4728 Год назад +5

      Yea, make it so you are at work the regular 7-16 time in manufacturing. Inside in a dark and dusty workshop you won't see sunshine except from a window during the week 😂 only on weekends. Feel like gollum.

    • @georgeswanson697
      @georgeswanson697 Год назад +2

      Hell on earth.

    • @Makapaa
      @Makapaa Год назад

      @@jooseppi4728 * Sees freshly made coffee in break room * "My Precioouuss!!"

  • @9k_lucid314
    @9k_lucid314 9 месяцев назад

    the pic at 0:46 is actually norway, tromsø. I live like a 3 min walk away from where that photo was taken lol

  • @Gyrbae
    @Gyrbae Год назад +16

    0:56 I think you got Australia mixed with Austria.

  • @Drunken_Master
    @Drunken_Master Год назад +5

    12:10 Not 30% of electricity, but 30% of energy. Firewood is mainly used for heating by individual houses.

  • @RichardTruman-lc1xn
    @RichardTruman-lc1xn Месяц назад

    The edit at 6:35 had me dead with the screams in the background lmao

  • @user-ft4pm3kc3g
    @user-ft4pm3kc3g 7 месяцев назад +1

    Hyvä vidio

  • @arcticpossi_schw1siantuntija42
    @arcticpossi_schw1siantuntija42 Год назад +96

    As a Finnish autist, I claim blizzards and nights are actually very cool if you live with them your entire life and hate sweating. Sweating is literally the only thing I hate.
    Everyone is heavily taxed (especially the rich who still get more money in their pocket after taxing), because everyone needs good public services, which the country does indeed provide.
    Plus, almost 100% of our water is drinkable after boiling and some lakes are clean enough to require no boiling unless you live in a pool of hand sanitizer (sry, a bit exaggerated but the thousands of lakes are mostly safe to make tea or cook with.)

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek Год назад +38

      "sweating is the only thing I hate"
      also finns: *SAUNA*

    • @ikkas00
      @ikkas00 Год назад +5

      I agree on the sweating, but only with clothes on as sauna is still great. The one thing i hate about winter is that my back will always sweat due to the extra protection my bag provides for my back, well that an slosh (loska).

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go Год назад +9

      As a Finnish autist I agree, but my aversion to sweating could be due to the conditioning to the cold weather and not truly because of an innate biological feature.
      Blizzards and nights are okay. You can easily walk or ski in thick skow. Ice is what I hate. Walking on snow is easy but tripping on ice gets you into hospital at tge worst. All our exchange students usually get their legs injured badly because they haven't got used to walking on ice like us native Finns do.
      I wouldn't say the rich are heavily taxed. Just the top income earners. After all, capital gains tax is only about 25%, but the highest wage tax can be more than 50%. Selling profit tax is 30% I think. And if you keep property without selling it in your position, you pay little taxes. Although true, in relation to other countries in the world this is probably heavy taxation.

    • @RoCK3rAD
      @RoCK3rAD Год назад

      Blizzards are definitely not cool or your blizzards don’t dump a lot of snow

    • @Rolando_Cueva
      @Rolando_Cueva Год назад

      How is the autism relevant??

  • @eetuv6075
    @eetuv6075 Год назад +13

    Long and dark winters combined with beautiful nightless summer weeks create a contrast that makes you appreciate the highs and lows. No light without shadow. Very corny but true. I think that mindset is at the core of many Finns outlook on life.

  • @inbar96
    @inbar96 2 месяца назад

    Here to applaud for your deep research even for the countries-animal drawings. I don’t know about the other countries, but Israel’s national bird is Upupa, which you managed to display quite clear even on this simple draw