This Country Just Appointed a Minister Of Happiness

This Country Just Appointed a Minister Of Happiness

The United Arab Emirates wants to boost the joy in its citizens by appointing a person specially charged with that responsibility.

The country’s first-ever Minister of State for Happiness will be tasked with overseeing “plans, projects, programs [and] indices” that improve the country’s overall mood, announced Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum in a series of tweets on Wednesday.

That wasn’t the only curiously named role in the Prime Minister’s lineup—he also appointed a new Minister of State for Tolerance and changed the Ministry of Cabinet Affairs to a more forward-leaning label:

The U.A.E. isn’t the only country with a desire to see more happy people. In 1972, Bhutan instituted a “Gross National Happiness Index” that surveys the level of happiness in the country, and in recent years, Thailand and the United Kingdom have tried out similar happiness projects.

Some would say that the U.A.E. already fares quite well in the happiness department. In the 2015 World Happiness Report that attempts to subjectively score countries on their well-being, the country ranked 20th in the world. However, some have criticized the Persian Gulf nation’s move as a distraction from its human rights issues.

“The Ministry of Happiness sounds sort of Orwellian and sinister given that this is a surveillance state, but it is in line with their quite high self-regard,” Nicholas McGeehan, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, told the New York Times.

 

Join our campaign and sign up to get involved: media@icfuae.org.uk