Let’s start with a comforting thought: humanity, as a whole, is actually doing… okay.
Not “everything is perfect” okay. More like “the world is on fire in some places, but also people in other places are quietly doing better than before” okay.
That’s the core vibe of the World Happiness Report 2026—a massive global study by the Wellbeing Research Centre at the University of Oxford, in partnership with Gallup and the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network .
But this year’s edition has a twist.
It’s not just asking “Who’s happiest?”
It’s asking a much more uncomfortable question:
“Is social media quietly making us miserable—especially the younger generation?”
And the answer is… annoyingly nuanced.
First, The Good News: Humanity Isn’t Spiraling (Entirely)
If you expected a doom-and-gloom report, plot twist: globally, happiness has actually improved in many places.
- 79 countries have seen significant gains in happiness
- Only 41 countries experienced declines
That’s not exactly utopia, but it’s also not the apocalypse Twitter promised.
And yes, the Nordic countries are still doing their usual thing:
- Finland: still number one (basically the final boss of happiness)
- Followed by Iceland, Denmark, Costa Rica, Sweden, and Norway
Costa Rica sneaking into the top tier is particularly interesting—it shows happiness isn’t just about GDP flexing. Turns out, sunshine and social cohesion are pretty solid DLCs for life.
Even more surprising: Young people in most parts of the world are actually happier than they were 20 years ago.
Yes, really.
In 85 out of 136 countries, under-25s report higher life satisfaction compared to the 2006–2010 period .
So if your instinct is “kids these days are doomed,” the data politely disagrees.
Now The Plot Twist: Except… The West
Here’s where things get weird.
While global youth happiness is mostly improving, there’s one region where it’s going in the opposite direction:
- North America
- Western Europe
- Australia & New Zealand (aka NANZ)
In these places, young people are significantly less happy than they were 15–20 years ago. And not just slightly—some of these countries now rank near the bottom globally in youth happiness trends.
This also aligns with data I discussed earlier in this article.
So what changed?
Well… something happened in the early 2010s.
Let’s just say it fits in your pocket and sends notifications every 3 seconds.
The Real Suspect: Social Media (But It’s Complicated)
If this were a crime story, social media would be the obvious suspect. And the report doesn’t shy away from that idea—but it also refuses to oversimplify it.
Here’s the key finding:
Light social media use = generally fine (even positive)
Heavy use = consistently linked to lower wellbeing
For example:
- Teens using 7+ hours per day have much lower wellbeing than those under 1 hour
- The effect is especially strong for girls in Western Europe
In short: scrolling is fine. Living inside the scroll is not.
Not All Internet Time Is Created Equal
Here’s where it gets interesting—and slightly ironic. The report separates online activity into two categories:
The “Good” Internet
- Messaging friends
- Learning
- Creating content
- Reading news
These are linked to higher life satisfaction.
The “Questionable” Internet
- Passive scrolling
- Social media feeds
- Gaming (yes, sorry)
- “Browsing for fun”
These are linked to lower life satisfaction
So the internet isn’t the villain. It’s what you do on it.
(Which is bad news if your screen time report says “Instagram: 5h 42m.”)
The Platform Problem: Not All Apps Are Equal
Another underrated insight: Platform design matters more than platform existence.
In Latin America, for example:
- Platforms focused on communication → positive impact
- Platforms driven by algorithmic content and influencers → negative impact
Translation:
Talking to friends = good
Watching strangers live better lives than you = not great for mental health
Shocking, I know.
The “Everyone Else Is Here” Trap
One of the most brutal findings in the report comes from behavioral economics:
Many people use social media not because they enjoy it—but because everyone else is using it.
Even better:
- People would pay little to use social media
- But would demand a lot of money to stop using it
That’s not a healthy relationship.
That’s Stockholm syndrome with Wi-Fi.
Check out my other article: Why Do Successful People Seem to Get More Stupid?
The Silent Damage: Not Just Mood, But Society
The report doesn’t stop at individual wellbeing—it zooms out.
And what it finds is… mildly concerning.
Heavy internet and social media use are linked to:
- Lower trust (in people and institutions)
- Fewer real-life social interactions
- Declining sense of belonging
In other words, it’s not just making individuals sad.
It’s quietly eroding the social glue that keeps societies functioning.
And guess who’s most affected?
- Gen Z
- Millennials (to a lesser extent)
Meanwhile, older generations are just vibing, unaffected—or even slightly benefiting.
Boomers: “We told you to go outside.”
Science: “…they might have had a point.”
The Most Important Finding (That Nobody Talks About)
Here’s the part that deserves way more attention: Social belonging matters WAY more than social media use.
In one example:
- Improving a student’s sense of belonging at school
→ boosts happiness 4–6x more than reducing social media use
Let that sink in.
We’ve been arguing about screen time limits…when the real issue might be whether people feel connected in real life. That’s like arguing about your phone battery while ignoring the fact your house has no electricity.
Gender Differences: Not Everyone Is Affected Equally
The report also highlights a key nuance:
- Girls tend to experience a stronger negative relationship between heavy social media use and wellbeing
- Boys show more mixed results, especially outside Western countries
There’s also a strange pattern: Heavy users are more likely to be very happy OR very unhappy. So social media doesn’t just drag everyone down.
It amplifies extremes.
Which, if you think about it, is exactly what algorithms are designed to do.
The Global Paradox: Same Apps, Different Outcomes
Here’s one of the most fascinating contradictions:
- Social media usage levels are similar across countries
- But its impact varies wildly
For example:
- Latin America → high usage, high happiness
- Western countries → similar usage, lower happiness
So the real takeaway:
- Social media doesn’t exist in a vacuum
- Culture, society, and context matter a lot
Same app. Different life.
So… Is Social Media Actually the Villain?
Short answer: Yes… but not alone.
The report is very clear:
Social media is an important factor, but not the only one.
Other contributors include:
- Economic pressures
- Social isolation
- Education systems
- Cultural shifts
Blaming everything on Instagram is convenient.
But reality is more like a messy group project where everyone contributed to the problem.
The Policy Question: What Do We Even Do?
Governments are already reacting.
For example:
- Australia raised the minimum social media age from 13 to 16
- Other countries are considering similar restrictions
But here’s the catch: Even scientists can’t agree on the best approach.
Different studies use similar data… and reach completely different conclusions. Which is academic speak for: “We’re still figuring this out.”
Final Thought: The Real Problem?
The data doesn’t say social media is evil. It says something much more uncomfortable:
We built a world where connection is everywhere… but belonging is optional.
And humans are really, really bad at living like that.
So maybe the goal isn’t to delete apps, regulate screens, or romanticize a pre-internet past. Maybe the real challenge is this:
How do we build a world where technology connects us—without quietly replacing everything that actually makes us feel connected?
Because if we don’t solve that…It won’t matter how fast the internet gets.
We’ll still feel alone.
