India’s young adults and elderly are ‘Utkarsh’: Global Welfare Studies
The middle -aged young and old life of India is lagging behind both and older questions about both old and old life satisfaction and are telling about the new questions that it is really what it means to flourish for a lifetime.

In India, young and older adults are growing more in those middle -aged, the study of more than 2 lakh people in 22 countries has suggested.
The global rich study conducted by researchers from institutes including Harvard University and Bremen University, Germany has been envisaged to understand factors that control the good of a person and a community.
Fruit -flowers were defined as a state in which all aspects of a person’s life are good.
In Wave 1 of the study, questionnaire reactions were analyzed from 202,898 people from 22 countries spread over six continents. Conclusions are published in nature by nature.
The authors wrote, “Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Sweden and the United States flourish with age in many countries, but not all. In India, Egypt, Kenya and Japan, the patterns are some more U-shaped,” the authors wrote.
Questionnaire surveyed people about the aspects of goodness, such as happiness, health, meaning and relationships as well as demographic, social, political, religious factors and childhood experiences.
While men and women from all over the world reported similar patterns, some countries found maximum differences. Men in Brazil reported more flourishing than women, and in Japan than women
In addition, those people were found to report a high fruiting -flower than those in most countries.
However, in India and Tanzania, married people reported less fruiting compared to those singles.
The study also found that employed people reported more fruiting and flowering than those. Being a student related to self-employment, retirement and more satisfaction than being employed in countries including India, Japan, Israel and Poland.
The writers also found that the youth from all over the world were “not doing it and also used to do”.
He said that despite the country-wise difference in the pattern of satisfaction with age, “the overall global pattern is disturbing”, he said.
He said that it will help solve more data collected over time if these patterns are a ‘age effect’ or ‘coorest effect’.
In India, housing, government approval, political voice and satisfaction of the city are the strength of the country, while education, taking very little interest in life, with financial concerns, there are areas that need to pay attention, found in the analysis.
Global Utkarsh studies are expected to help to understand ‘flourishing’ in general, especially in non-Western contexts. It is also expected to highlight which patterns are culturally specific and which are more universal.
The purpose of the study is to support and expand the findings of similar studies such as the World Happiness Report.