Revealed: The UK Has the Best Road Safety
bestcasinosites.net, a platform for finding trusted online casinos, has conducted a study to find out which countries have the world’s luckiest people. The researchers made privilege measurable by examining eight factors, including wealth, educational systems, employment rates, income distribution, opportunities for advancement, human rights, freedom to travel, and gender parity.
The researchers used data provided by the U.N., OECD and World Bank in order to rank the countries based on privilege. The world’s luckiest people are those whose countries are members of the European Free Trade Association (Switzerland, Iceland, and Norway), whereas only one country from G7 makes the top 15 (Canada). Britain ranks 17th out of 37, narrowly ahead of the United States and Germany.
“As a platform that is enjoyed by many lucky winners in the U.K, we wanted to engage with the topic of being born lucky,” said Aidan Howe, Chief Editor at bestcasinosites.net. “It is very humbling to be reminded of how something totally out of our control—where we’re born—has such an impact on our destiny in life.”
Table 1: The World’s Luckiest People
|
Additional key takeaways:
- Czech people are the least likely to be unemployed, at just 2.9% of the labour force
- Young people in Japan are the least likely to be out of work, with a youth unemployment rate of just 3.11%
- Korean people are the most likely to have completed higher education (30%)
- Icelandic people enjoy the world’s best income equality
- Danish people enjoy the world’s best social mobility
- People from Singapore and Luxembourg have the best career opportunities
- Switzerland has the highest median of wealth, at 164,383 (USD)
- The Swiss are the most likely to be millionaires (11.8% of society)
- Australians and New Zealanders enjoy the world’s best air quality
- People in Luxembourg enjoy the world’s best human rights