

Nigeria has been ranked the
6th most miserable country by Steve Hanke, an economist from John Hopkins
University in Baltimore, United States.
The ranking is titled,
Hanke’s Annual Misery Index 2018: The World’s Saddest (And Happiest) Countries.
“In the sphere of
economics, misery tends to flow from high inflation, steep borrowing costs and
unemployment,” Hanke warns.
Hanke, in his explanatory
note wrote:
“The original Misery Index
was just a simple sum of a nation’s annual inflation rate and its unemployment
rate.
“The Index has been
modified several times, first by Robert Barro of Harvard and then by myself.
“My modified Misery Index
is the sum of the unemployment, inflation and bank lending rates, minus the
percentage change in real GDP per capita.
“Higher readings on the
first three elements are ‘bad’ and make people more miserable. These are offset
by a ‘good’ (GDP per capita growth), which is subtracted from the sum of the
‘bads.’
“A higher Misery Index
score reflects a higher level of ‘misery,’ and it’s a simple enough metric that
a busy president, without time for extensive economic briefings, can understand
at a glance.”
Countries ranking as least
miserable in the world on the 2018 Misery Index are Thailand and Hungary,
having ranked 95th and 94th respectively of the 95 countries ranked by Hanke.
Venezuela, Argentina, Iran,
Brazil and Turkey lead in that order, while Nigeria is sixth.
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