Relationships, mindset key to happiness: activists

April 13, 2011 - 0:0

LONDON (Reuters) – If you want to be happy, think positive and take a break from your mobile phone -- that's the advice from a new global movement for happiness whose members include the Dalai Lama.

Action for Happiness, set up last year and was due to be officially launched in London Tuesday, says it rejects individualism and the pursuit of material wealth and provides alternative practical tips for a happier life.
The movement, co-founded by Richard Layard, an economics professor at the London School of Economics and an expert on happiness, is supported by more than 4,500 individual members from 68 countries.
In support of its argument, the group said surveys of Britons and Americans show that they are no more content now than in the 1950s despite substantial economic progress.
""The main external factor affecting a person's happiness is the quality of their relationships, at home, at work and in the community. And the main internal factor is their underlying mental health,"" it added in a statement.
Its recommendations on how to stay in high spirits include advice to help others, exercise and pursue goals, and less obvious tips, such as meditating, taking a break from the mobile phone and the internet and organizing a street party.
Governments are becoming increasingly concerned with assessing national well-being using data outside traditional economic measures to help mold policy.
Britain will soon start asking new questions in its regular household survey to establish how satisfied people are with their lives.
France has asked Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, a former World Bank chief economist, and a group of international experts, to find new ways to measure economic progress taking into account social well-being.