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    The world's happiest cities

    by Zack O'Malley Greenburg

    Ten urban centers closely associated with unmitigated joy.

    Ever since Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers appeared in the 1933 film Flying Down to Rio, the world has been fascinated with Rio de Janeiro. Popular perception of the city is infused with images of starry-eyed youngsters dancing into the dusk, backed by imposing mountains and dark sea.

    That view has propelled Rio to the top of our list of the world's happiest cities. Famous for its annual Carnaval festival (starting Feb. 13 next year), the second-largest metropolis in South America finished first among 50 cities in a recent survey conducted by Simon Anholt, an author and policy adviser.

    "Brazil is associated with all these qualities of good humor and good living and Carnaval," says Anholt. "Carnaval is very important--it's the classic image that people have of Rio, and it's an image of happiness."

    In Pictures: The World's Happiest Cities

    Next on the list is the top city from Down Under: Sydney, Australia. Known for balmy weather, friendly locals and an iconic opera house, Sydney fared well in Anholt's survey because of its association with a popular brand--Australia.

    "It's where everybody would like to go," he says. "Everybody thinks they know Australia because they've seen Crocodile Dundee. There's this image of this nation of people who basically sit around having barbecues."

    Rounding out the top five are third-ranked Barcelona, Spain, which Anholt calls "the classic Mediterranean city"; fourth-ranked Amsterdam, Netherlands, because Anholt's young respondents "know you can smoke dope in the bars"; and Melbourne, Australia, which makes the list simply because it's in Australia.

    "People know it's in Australia, and that it's full of Australians," says Anholt. "Therefore, it must be fun."

    Behind the Numbers
    The data Anholt provided for our list is part of his Nation Brands Index, which he developed in 2005. The latest incarnation, the 2009 Anholt-GfK Roper City Brands Index, was released in June. The data was compiled from online interviews with 10,000 respondents in 20 countries.

    Happiness is difficult to quantify, and Anholt acknowledges that his data is less an indicator of where local populations are happiest than a reflection of respondents' thinking about where they could imagine themselves happy.

    "This is a survey of perception, not a survey of reality," he says. "People write me all the time and say 'that's not true.' It probably isn't true, but it's what people think. The gap between perception and reality is what interests city governments."

    The French historian Fernand Braudel wrote that "Happiness, whether in business or private life, leaves very little trace in history." But a perception of happiness leaves a strong trace on the balance sheets of cities that depend on conventions, tourism and an influx of talent.

    The Pursuit of Happiness
    Anholt notes that the results of his survey reflect the longstanding reputation of Mediterranean and Latin American cities as non-stop party locales.

    "It's pretty much the expected bunch," says Anholt. "Though I'm a little surprised about Spain outdoing Italy. It's interesting that the Spanish are perceived as being happier than the Italians--I find the Spanish rather gloomy."

    Still, Barcelona--Spain's highest-ranked city--has plenty of supporters.

    "The beauty of the city and its environs, along with affordable housing and business opportunities, is the fantastic lifestyle," says Michelle Finkelstein, a vice president at travel agency Our Personal Guest. "There's not the stress of getting a child into the best preschool--the public ones are good and close by. And they have the top soccer team and some of the best weather in Europe."

    Other places in the world that lack the metropolitan flair of the cities on this list are often identified with the notion of happiness. "Anyone lucky enough to visit the magical Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan would know that there is no competition: There can be no happier place," says Patricia Schultz, author of 1,000 Places to See Before You Die. "This small Buddhist nation of incredibly stunning beauty follows a unique guiding philosophy of GNH--Gross National Happiness. You can see it in their open faces--they smile from the heart. Barcelona has nothing on them."

    Global rivalries notwithstanding, Anholt notes that his findings more or less support historical trends, with one notable exception.

    "The cities on this list would probably be the same if I'd been running this survey in 1890, aside from Sydney and Melbourne," he says. "Australia is kind of a branding miracle."

    Not bad for a former penal colony.

    Top 5 World's Happiest Cities
    1. Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
    2. Sydney, Australia
    3. Barcelona, Spain
    4. Amsterdam, Netherlands
    5. Melbourne, Australia

    See the full list of The World's Happiest Cities

    More From Forbes.com:
    World's Friendliest Countries
    World's Best Places To Eat Well
    World's Best-Paid Cities

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    428 comments

    • Bob  •  2 years 5 months ago
      If I lived in a city where the emphasis was on hot bodies and string bikinis, I would be very happy also. Too bad the police kill homeless children to thin the herd...
    • c m  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I think its fair to say that online survey's don't reach the poorest of folks that might provide a less biased opinion of the happiest cities
    • JOE PRO  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Well we knew the USA didn't make the list this year! Nothing happy happening here on the national front. Thankful for my family for the little happiness that can be in this dreadful economy.
    • AliciaB  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Bob 1--The police kill homeless kids??? Well it's no surprise, sadly, but still...Lord, take me home, I'm done in this world. Vicious rabid animals....
    • JC  •  2 years 5 months ago
      "...closely associated with unmitigated joy"?
      They say that perception is truth, but this really depends on whose perception your listening to. It's a Forbes article so I really wonder who is reading Forbes these days, students on their eternal spring break? Now there's a group that has a limited menu of what constitutes "unmitigated joy". I've lived in three of the 10 cities and recently visited another on the list.
      Amsterdam: the native Amsterdamers and other Dutch citizens who had moved there are moving out because of the racial problems. The fact that you can smoke a joint in a coffee shop licensed to sell is. OHHHH, get a life.
      Madrid: Beautiful city, lots of pickpocketing from the Eastern European immigrants, the African immigrants and the indigents that seem to plague every major city.
      Barcelona: (see Madrid, different beauty and a beach)
      San Francisco: Rice-a-Roni is about all you'll be able to afford if you live there.
    • Bill  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Wow - what a friggin' stupid article - San Francisco? Really? I guess people in the rest of the world have never been there.

      I could see Miami or Dallas or even Seattle or LA - but San Francisco? Gloomy weather, precious people, nasty sports fans and dirty streets. A regular trifecta + 1 of awfulness. And I like the city.

      I also question any poll that leaves out LA in terms of perception because as one radio personality said once, lots of people move here and no one seems to move back to their hometowns. Hopefully our woeful economy will change some of that.
    • rhett  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Rio de Janeiro is not the happiest city on earth! Repeat, the person who did this survey has obviously never lived there. I lived in Rio for nearly three years, and I know first hand that there is a large portion of the people there that are destitute. As mentioned previously, Rio is beautiful and has many wonderful things to do, but happiness should not be measured upon tourist perceptions of the city. Its a large city and has all the large city crime, drugs, violence etc. Think NYC but nice weather all year round. I miss ya Rio, but I don't think you are the happiest city in the world.

      (I wonder if this article has anything to do with the International Olympic Committee. Strange that Spain and Brazil made the list, but no US city did (I'm thinking Chicago by the way). Where is the author from?)
    • Blue  •  2 years 5 months ago
      yes..what a stupid article.
      There's a war in Rio going on.
      Yes..if ur rich you can party with the germans and corupt brazilians at the marina..lol
      But I'll take lisbon instead.Beer is 40 cents there. :)
    • Sharif  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I think the happiest place for every people is to his/her birth place. I never get that sort of peace and happiness which I get from my own village that is situated at Chandpur in Bangladesh.To write a comment in this box we should first understand the differnce between happiness and Peace.
    • Mike  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Dear yahoo.com,
      The fact that you decided to rank Rio De Janeiro, Brazil as one of the happiest places in the world not disgusts me, but makes me question the entire integrity of the entire site in general. The fact that the majority of the people within the city live in poverty and that the city is ranked as one of the most dangerous cities in the world by not only one, but several other websites isn’t something that should be taken for granted. Please reconsider the research enacted by your employees because it is misleading and difficult for many to endure. Please do not create something that is based on facts gathered on such a specific and small sample. It’s terrible..
      Mike.
    • okusi  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Am surprise about your conclusion about happiest cities. 1 what are the conditions or yard stick u used to decide your conclusion. 2. have u ever being to Lagos, Nigeria before? u go over there and c real happy people even when they are suffering they keep smilling. What are people will considered hardship Lagosians will laugh at it. In the evening u see people coming to beer parlour to easy tension.
      Else Lagos should on he list of the happiest cities. It is not how beautiful a city thats make it happy, is the people in it.
    • #1 Indie Roc...  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Sydney? You gotta be kidding me right? Australians are some of the most loud, vulgar & racist people in the world. Jeezzz, WTF?
    • First L  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Yes, truly a fluff piece. I would certainly not take this seriously. As you can read from the majority of comments here, Rio is far from the happiest place on Earth unless you happen to in that 10% that have armored cars, body guards, guarded buildings and condos, loads of money to burn, etc. And, oh yeah, plumbing. 40% of Rio is not connected to the municipal sewage system so raw waste pours out of the slums into the ocean untreated. And crime as most people have noted is beyond the pale. Think DC, north Philly, South LA, Detroit COMBINED. Murders there should easily surpass the 1200 mark this year. The slums there are their own world controlled by drug gangs and corrupt police and politicians. That all being said, there is enormous potential. It certainly could be the world's happiest city but there is a long way to go. World Cup 2014 will provide a huge boost there. And perhaps a successful Olympic bid - which South America deserves - will provide the psychological and political impetus to push The Marvelous City into it's rightful position as a desirable place to live and visit.
    • Lisa  •  2 years 5 months ago
      obviously u guys haven't been to Jamaica. We are the happiest despite our challenges!
    • Mark n' Annie  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I'm happy in LA, happy the fires haven't gotten us!!! Happy i've got a job.. and a happy wife...
    • Joseph  •  2 years 5 months ago
      yes, truly one of the dumbest and least informed articles ever written. I can't imagine listing Rio or Amsterdam. what kind of drug adled person could even write this? I wish I was paid to be high and stupid, at the same time!!
    • annie  •  2 years 5 months ago
      Buenos Aries Argentina. WHAT a beuatiful place
    • Marisa  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I´m an American living in Barcelona. Honestly, people from Barcelona are not happy. They´re always in a bad moood, they are rude, it´s like there is some competition going on to be the biggest jerk. I´ve never met a people with a worse attitude. My general sense is that Americans are happier because being happy doesn´t mean getting drunk and not working.
    • Dr.sandra  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I agree that this is one of the dumbest studies I've ever read. I don't believe a word of it!
    •  •  2 years 5 months ago
      I would never move out of the United
      States right now, only because I have children in the school system. Once the children are done, maybe. Certainly not Rio. I am with the post of js5, maybe Sweden or Switzerland or even the Virgin Islands to keep the tropical going since I now live in sunny sw Florida. Ahhhh to Forbes-lot of hogwash.....