Norway is almost the same Northern European countries as Montana, and it is somewhat abnormal in the world of modern economy. With per capita GDP, medical, education, freedom of press, transparency of corruption, Norway has more than 5 million statistics and has been selected as the top ten countries in the world. Small Scandinavian countries are ranked second in the United Nations World Happiness Report. However, this is not necessarily the case.
Nonetheless, the Scandinavian countries have gained extremely high scores on key welfare and development indicators. Norway and Denmark are ranked first and fifth in the UN Human Development Index. According to the Corruption Perceptions Index developed by Transparency International, Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden are one of the six most undisturbed countries in the world. According to the same standards, Britain was ranked 10th, Iceland was tenth, and the United States was 18th. The suicide rate in Denmark and Norway is lower than the world average. In Denmark, Iceland, Norway, the suicide rate is lower than the United States, France, Japan. Sweden's suicide rate is almost the same as in the United States, but the rate of suicide in Finland is higher. In 2017, Norway was selected as the happiest country in the world, followed by Denmark and Iceland. According to the same happiness index, Finland was ranked 6th, Sweden 10th, and the United States 15th.
The five Scandinavian countries, also known as Scandinavian countries, are Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. These countries differ in many ways, but there are many similarities. In particular, their governments have important industries and citizens enjoy a lot of political freedom, so they are all social democracy. Each country has three government departments, most of whom are familiar with administrative, judicial and legal systems. In each country, there is a National Assembly that elections citizens by proportional representation.
Norway is constitutional democracy and is listed by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) as the world's most livable country. In the Global Economic Forum 's Global Gender Gap Report, Norway is considered to be the major country in reducing gender disparities.