
Social media making young people less happy, report finds
Al Jazeera
Heavy social media use has contributed to ‘worrying decline’ in wellbeing in Western countries, World Happiness Report says.
Social media has played a large role in declining happiness among young people in Western countries, a United Nations-backed report has found.
Heavy social media use partly explains a “worrying decline” in the wellbeing of young people in the West, the latest edition of the annual World Happiness Report said on Wednesday.
In total, 15 Western countries, including the United States, Canada, Australia and New Zealand, saw significant declines in youth wellbeing over the past two decades, according to the report.
The trend was not observed globally, with young people in regions covering 90 percent of the world’s population reporting higher life satisfaction than before.
“The trends are caused by many factors, which differ between continents. However, the evidence in this report does suggest that heavy social media use, especially in some countries, provides an important part of the explanation,” researchers John F Helliwell, Richard Layard, Jeffrey D Sachs, Jan-Emmanuel De Neve, Lara B Aknin, and Shun Wang said in an executive summary of the report.













