venezuelaThese countries make it harder for people who are just trying to get by.Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
  • High unemployment and soaring inflation can be a bad combination.
  • That's the main idea behind economist Arthur Okun's "Misery Index," which adds the two factors to determine how "miserable" a country is.
  • Using available 2016 data from the World Bank, we put together a list of the 14 countries with the highest misery indices.


It's hard to make a living when you can't find a job, but prices keep climbing and climbing.
That's the main idea behind economist Arthur Okun's "Misery Index." The index is determined by adding together a country's current unemployment rate and its current rate of inflation. The higher the sum, the theory goes, the more "miserable" a country is.
It's not a perfect measure. The index relies on accurate and up-to-date statistics, which not all countries provide. And critics have pointed to studies that show unemployment has a bigger affect on happiness (or unhappiness) than inflation does.  
But few would argue that the combination of high unemployment and high inflation is ideal for people who are just trying to get by.
In light of that, Business Insider compiled a list of the 14 countries with the highest misery indices, using 2016 data for unemployment and inflation from the World Bank. Some countries have both high unemployment and inflation, while others experience one factor more so than the other.
The World Bank did not have recent or complete statistics available for a handful of countries, including North Korea, Syria, Libya, Iraq, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Yemen, and Argentina. While some of these countries have high inflation, high unemployment, or both — the missing data prevented us from including them on the list.

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