TheNigeriaTime

Here’s what global happiness metrics omit about Nigeria

2026-03-24 - 01:13

By EBUKA UKOH Nigeria is ranked 106th on the Global Happiness Index. Noteworthy too is that Nigeria, over the years, dropped all the way from 102nd to another position before settling at 106th. At the same time, Nigeria stands among the world’s most terror-affected countries, with violence claiming lives at an alarming pace. In recent months, Nigeria witnessed suicide bombings in Maiduguri, the birthplace of Boko Haram (interpreted as Western education is evil), mass killings in parts of Kwara State, and continued terrorist violence across multiple regions. These are not isolated events. They form part of a broader pattern that reshapes daily life for millions of people. The above mentioned facts sit side by side, but they do not describe the same country. One is a number. The other is a lived reality. And between them lies a question global metrics have yet to answer: What does it mean to measure happiness in a place where survival itself is a daily struggle? Limits of metrics The World Happiness Report evaluates well-being using indicators such as life evaluation, income, social support, and perceived freedom. These measures are useful in relatively stable societies. They assume that the basic conditions of life remain intact. Nigeria disrupts those assumptions. The report measures how people feel about their lives. It does not measure how hard it is to stay alive. Across the Sahel, which now accounts for over half of global terrorism-related deaths, insecurity is not incidental. It is structural. In 2023 alone, the Sahel accounted for roughly 55 per cent of all global terrorism deaths, with countries in the region recording thousands of fatalities in a single year. Communities adapt to persistent threats. Families reorganise around uncertainty. Entire regions operate under conditions that conventional well-being indices were never designed to capture. To interpret Nigeria’s ranking as a simple indicator of unhappiness is to miss the deeper issue. Living beyond metrics Nigerians are not simply reporting low life satisfaction. They are navigating high-intensity survival while sustaining meaning in ways that rarely enter global measurement frameworks. Despite violence, economic strain, and institutional fragility, social life persists. Communal networks remain active. Religious participation continues to anchor daily existence. Informal systems of care step in where formal institutions fall short. These are not peripheral features of Nigerian life; they are central to how people endure. In many households, economic pressure has intensified expectations around provision, particularly for men navigating unstable labour conditions. Families stretch limited resources. Social obligations remain intact even when institutional support weakens. Yet life continues. Not because conditions are easy, but because social systems adapt. This is not happiness in the conventional sense. It is endurance shaped by community, faith and obligation. Think about it as a regional crisis, not merely a national anomaly. The Nigerian case cannot be understood in isolation. Six of the 10 most terror-affected countries in the world are located in sub-Saharan Africa, with the Sahel emerging as the global epicentre of contemporary terrorism. These dynamics are driven by a combination of governance gaps, climate stress, and the expansion of transnational armed groups. Violence does not respect national borders. Yet global indices continue to evaluate countries as if they exist in isolation. What appears as a national ranking often reflects regional instability that exceeds the scope of country-level analysis. This creates a mismatch between measurement and reality. Why Finland fails as a benchmark The contrast between Nigeria and Finland highlights the limits of current frameworks. Finland consistently ranks at the top of global happiness indices. It benefits from high institutional trust, predictable welfare systems, and a stable security environment. Citizens operate within structures that reduce uncertainty and support long-term planning. Nigeria operates under different conditions. Security is uneven. Institutions are stretched. Citizens rely heavily on informal systems to navigate daily living. Happiness rankings reward order. They struggle to account for resilience under disorder. What really should count If global well-being metrics are to remain meaningful, they must evolve. Exposure to structural violence should matter. Informal care systems should matter. Religious and spiritual coping should matter. Community-based resilience should matter. These are not secondary variables. In many parts of Africa, they are central to how people live and survive. African philosophical traditions have long emphasised relational existence. The idea that a person is constituted through community is not abstract. It is a lived reality. In contexts of instability, this relational fabric becomes even more critical. A measurement system that excludes these dimensions risks misunderstanding entire societies. Rethinking what we measure Nigeria’s ranking should not be read only as a reflection of how Nigerians feel. It should be read as an indication of how global systems struggle to measure life under pressure. What is being lived cannot always be captured by what is being counted. Nigeria’s position on the happiness index is not simply a story of dissatisfaction. It is a story of people living within constraints, adapting to instability, and sustaining meaning through systems that operate beyond formal measurements. Until global frameworks learn to account for those realities, they will continue to describe Nigeria without fully understanding it. And a world that cannot measure what it takes to survive will continue to misunderstand the lives that endure it. •Ukoh, a co-author of Built By The Ancestors, wrote from New York, United States

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