Community Corner

Map Of The Happiest States: How Minnesota Ranks

Minnesota has one of the highest volunteer rates in the country.

MINNESOTA — Other than a volcano that hurls “lava bombs” and the occasional hurricane, there’s not a lot of reason to be glum in Hawaii, which ranked first in an analysis that purports to sort out the happiest and unhappiest states. Minnesota ranks no. 3.

The personal finance website WalletHub collected data from across more than 30 indicators — the per capita rates of depression, the rate of sports participation, per capita income and that sort of thing — to come up with the ranking. Money only goes so far to make people happy.

The state ranked second in overall emotional and physical wellbeing and fourth in the community and environment ranking.

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Minnesota was third in "highest volunteer rate." The Land of 10,000 Lakes has one of the nation's lowest divorce rates, too, ranking fourth in that category.

Minnesota also ranked as the third “safest” state overall.

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People who live on less than $75,000 a year face financial pressures that can cause stress, according to Amanda Watson Lewis, an assistant professor of psychology at Kentucky’s Murray State University.

If people earn more than $100,000 or so a year, they “tend to begin to lose the ability to savor everyday pleasures,” Lewis wrote in comments accompanying the 2018 Happiest States in America report.

“A lot of the connection between money and happiness is also tied up in how people spend their money,” she wrote. “For example, research shows that people tend to be happier when they can spend their money to help others.”

Health, personality, self-esteem and other traits are better predictors of happiness than is money, Lewis wrote.

“Part of our level of happiness may even be set in our genetic code,” she wrote. “However, it seems like the most commonly agreed-upon predictor of happiness is love. If a person has positive relationships with friends, family, and romantic partners, they are more likely to report happiness.”

So, what makes Hawaiians so happy? It isn’t the amount of sleep they’re getting — the Aloha State ranks 50th in this area. They also tend to stay married — the state has the fifth-lowest divorce rate. Hawaii ranks first in the overall emotional and physical wellbeing ranking and fourth in the community and environment ranking. Hawaii ranks third for the lowest depression rate among adults.

Rounding out the top five spots in the 2018 Happiest States in America report were Utah, Minnesota, North Dakota and California.

The five unhappiest states, according to the ranking, are West Virginia, Arkansas, Louisiana, Alaska and Oklahoma.

Incidentally, we’re not as happy nationally as we once were. The United States slipped four spots on the World Happiness Report, which ranks 156 countries according to their happiness and 117 countries by the happiness of their immigrants.

A major focus in this year’s report was on migration within and between countries.

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