According to z24 (Dutch), the Netherlands is in second place on the so-called Misery Index, right after Japan. The index adds unemployment rate to inflation rate, and a high position (low value) indicates a healthy economy.
- Japan: 4,5
- Netherlands: 4,9
- Norway: 5,3
- Denmark: 5,5
- Switzerland: 5,6
- South Korea: 6,8
- Great-Britain: 7,3
- Australia: 7,5
- Austria: 7,9
- Luxemburg: 8,2
You could probably come up with all sorts of reservations against such an index. For starters, unemployment rates are notoriously unreliable, as they tend to be closer related to propaganda than to statistics. But even a Netherlands that is merely highish in the index might be still be doing well because of it. Z24 writer Mathijs Bouman points out that consumer confidence in the Netherlands took a dive the past half year from 15% to -2%. The factors that have a healing influence on lowered consumer confidence? Low unemployment and inflation rates.