First stab
… consequent to lower inequality
-
Lower inequality often comes with:
- higher taxes
- stronger public services
- more social cohesion
-
Higher “happiness” (life satisfaction scores) tends to correlate with:
- safety
- healthcare quality
- trust in institutions
- community integration
For a 56-year-old UK retiree, the key filters are:
- healthcare access
- residency/visa ease
- cost of living vs pension
- cultural comfort and integration
Beauty parade — best overall fits
🥇 Portugal
Why it stands out
- Relatively low inequality for a Southern European country
- High expat friendliness
- Good public + private healthcare mix
- Warm climate, slower pace
Happiness level: solid, not top-tier but improving
Key edge: easiest soft landing from the UK
Watch-outs
- Bureaucracy can be slow
- Public healthcare waiting times vary
🥈 Spain
Why it works
- Strong social fabric, family-oriented culture
- Universal healthcare
- Lower inequality than UK post-tax
Happiness: consistently high lifestyle satisfaction
Key edge: quality of life per pound is excellent
Watch-outs
- Wealth inequality still present in cities
- Language helps a lot outside expat zones
🥉 Netherlands
Why it ranks highly
- Low inequality after redistribution
- Very high institutional trust
- Excellent healthcare
Happiness: among Europe’s highest
Key edge
- Extremely well-run systems
Watch-outs
- Expensive housing
- Less “warm” socially at first
- Tax heavy
4. Denmark
Why it’s here
- One of the lowest inequality countries globally
- Top-tier happiness rankings
Key edge
- Security, healthcare, social trust
Watch-outs
- Very high taxes
- Harder to integrate socially
- Cold climate (both weather and social style)
5. Sweden
Why it fits
- Similar to Denmark but slightly more accessible
- Strong welfare state
Happiness: very high
Watch-outs
- Integration can be slow
- Cost of living high
6. New Zealand
Why consider it
- Lower inequality than UK (post-tax)
- Relaxed lifestyle, strong rule of law
Happiness: consistently high
Key edge
- English-speaking, culturally easier transition
Watch-outs
- Distance from UK/family
- Healthcare access depends on residency status
7. Canada
Why it’s viable
- Moderate inequality but strong redistribution
- Multicultural and generally inclusive
Happiness: high
Key edge
- Easier cultural fit for Asian diaspora
Watch-outs
- Cold climate
- Healthcare waiting times in some provinces
8. Singapore (wildcard)
Why it’s interesting
- Extremely safe, efficient
- Strong healthcare system
But here’s the catch
- Inequality is actually high
- Happiness is moderate, not Nordic-level
Why still include it
- For an Asian retiree, cultural familiarity + safety can outweigh inequality concerns
What actually matters more than inequality alone
If you’re seriously considering this, inequality is only one piece. For your situation, these matter more:
- Healthcare access without employment
- Residency rights for retirees
- Tax treatment of pensions
- Community fit (this is huge and often underestimated)
Straight answer to your underlying idea
- You can improve your lived experience by moving
- You cannot fully escape global economic forces
- But you can absolutely choose a society that feels fairer, calmer, and more functional day-to-day
Bottom line ranking (practical, not ideological)
- Portugal — best balance of ease, cost, lifestyle
- Spain — slightly more vibrant, similar benefits
- Netherlands — high-functioning but expensive
- Denmark — ideal system, harder lifestyle fit
- Sweden — similar to Denmark, slightly softer landing
- New Zealand — great but geographically far
- Canada — culturally easy, climate trade-off
- Singapore — culturally strong, inequality trade-off
If you want, I can narrow this down based on:
- your budget
- pension type
- whether you want city vs coastal
- how important Asian community presence is
That changes the ranking quite a bit.