According to The World Happiness Report, the United States fell to #23 in terms of happiness earlier this year — way behind Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark, Iceland and other countries in Europe.
William S. Becker, a former U.S. Energy Department official who now serves as executive director for the Presidential Climate Action Project, lays out a variety of reasons for the United States’ declining mental health in a biting op-ed published by The Hill on December 9.
Citing health care, education, inequality and other problems, Becker argues that the United States is failing its people miserably.
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“The U.S. is the among the wealthiest countries in the world per capita,” Becker explains, “but the American people are not happy. The Constitution doesn’t guarantee happiness, but the founding documents do say we all have an equal right to pursue it.”
Becker points to data from the World Happiness Report, noting that “Nordic nations dominate the top 10 list” in terms of happiness.
“The happiest countries have capitalist economies and democratic governments,” Becker argues, “but they provide their people with essential tools for success — tools that American conservatives brand as ‘socialist.’ Universal health care is one. The United States is the only high-income nation without it.”
Becker continues, “Americans pay nearly four times as much for prescription drugs and higher costs for hospitalization and doctors than people in other developed countries. More than 27 million Americans still have no health insurance.”
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The United States’ health insurance crisis, Becker warns, will become even worse if the Affordable Care Act of 2010, a.k.a. Obamacare, is overturned during President-elect Donald Trump’s second term.
“As of March,” Becker observes, “over 45 million Americans were enrolled in Obamacare. Trump tried to kill that option during his first term and says he has ‘concepts’ to replace it now. According to the Congressional Budget Office, 3.4 million Americans would lose health insurance without Obamacare.”
Access to “quality education,” according to Becker, also plays a major role in a country’s mental wellbeing — and the U.S., he says, falls way beyond Scandinavian countries in that area.
Inequality, Becker adds, is also harming Americans’ mental health.
Becker observes, “Income and wealth are more equitably distributed in happy countries such as Iceland, Denmark and Norway.… In 2017, Trump’s tax cuts widened the wealth gap by skewing tax policy toward the rich…. Trump has promised to lower corporate taxes even more next year…. Meanwhile, America’s middle class is shrinking while its lower class expands. Nearly 38 million Americans live in poverty.
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William S. Becker’s full op-ed for The Hill is available at this link.