International Men’s Day this year was celebrated on Sunday, the 19th of November. Epp Remmelg, leading analyst at Statistics Estonia, took the opportunity to find out how the Estonian man is doing.
In the Estonian Social Survey conducted in 2022, people aged 15 and over were asked how often they had felt happy and how often lonely in the past four weeks.
Estonian women were found to feel happy a bit more often than men. However, Estonian men feel slightly less lonely than women. Around 5% of the inhabitants of Estonia always feel happy. Two in five Estonian men report being happy most of the time.
Born to be happy
Happiness seems to come naturally to some people – it appears that there are those who know how to be happy all through life. The share of men who report feeling happy all the time does not change significantly with age, hovering between 5–6.5% in all age groups.
It also turns out that the sense of happiness does not increase with life experience and wisdom that comes with age. In fact, the number of men who indicate feeling happy most of the time declines with age. While one in two men feel happy most of the time when they are young, only 28% of men feel this way when they reach retirement age.
Having a partner and children increases happiness
The frequency of happiness is significantly boosted by being in an intimate partnership and even more so by having children in the family. 36% of single men indicate feeling happy all or most of the time. Having a partner and children adds to the feeling of happiness to such an extent that as many as 56% of these men report being happy always or most of the time.
Taking a look at the happiness of men in a couple relationship without children, we see that younger men, under 65, are happier (51%) than older men, but slightly less happy than family men with children.
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