Safe, happy and free: does Finland have all the answers?
In the first of our new series, The Upside, we look at how the country went from famine to topping nearly every global social ranking
Western Europe’s last naturally caused famine ended 150 years ago this winter. In a poor and backward part of the Russian empire called
Finland, more than a quarter of a million people – nearly 10% of the population – starved to death.
Last year, on the centenary of its independence, Finland was ranked, by assorted international indices,
the most stable, the safest and the best-governed country in the world. It was also the third wealthiest, the third least corrupt, the second most socially progressive and the third most socially just.
Finland’s judicial system is the most independent in the world, its police the most trusted, its banks the soundest, its companies the second most ethical, its elections the second freest, and its citizens enjoy the highest levels of personal freedom, choice and wellbeing.
The Nordic country’s 5.5 million inhabitants are also the third most gender-equal in the world and have the fifth lowest income inequality. Their babies are the least underweight, their kids feel the most secure, and their teens perform the second best at reading (only third at science, though).
In a century and a half, they seem to have done rather well. And so, as the Guardian embarks on
a new series investigating the things that are going right in the world, it feels natural to start in Helsinki.
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