Discover the 10 best countries to raise your children

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Raising children is not an easy task, especially in Brazil. That’s why we want to show you the 10 best countries for children

Our Brazil is a beautiful country!

But unfortunately, it lags behind other countries in many ways.: Human rights care, family, gender equality, happiness, income equality, security and development, public education system and well-developed health system.

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With this in mind, the American site “US News and World Report” separate the best countries to raise children. How about getting to know each other, and who knows, one day planning your suitcases? Check:

1 – Sweden

Sweden, officially the Kingdom of Sweden, it’s a nordic country, located on the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe. It has land borders with Norway to the west and with Finland to the northeast, washed by the Baltic Sea to the east and south. It is separated from Denmark to the southwest by the Öresund Strait, over which the Öresund Bridge passes.

GDP: $538.0 billion
Population: 10.1 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $51,185

Discover the 10 best countries to raise your children

2 – Denmark

the kingdom of denmark emerged in the 10th century and comprises two North Atlantic nations, the Faroe Islands and Greenland. Together with Sweden and Norway, it forms Scandinavia, a cultural region in northern Europe.

GDP: $324.9 billion
Population: 5.8 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $50,071

3 – Norway

The Kingdom of Norway is the westernmost country in the Scandinavian Peninsula, consisting mostly of mountainous terrain. Almost all of its population lives in the south, around the capital, Oslo. Norway’s coastline is made up of thousands of kilometers of fjords, bays and island shores. The Norwegians have developed a maritime cultureae operated throughout the Viking Age, establishing colonies in Iceland and Greenland.

GDP: $398.8 billion
Population: 5.3 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $72,058

4-Canada

Canada occupies approximately two-fifths of the North American continent, making it the second largest country in the world after Russia. The country is sparsely populated, with most of its 35.5 million people living within 200 kilometers of the US border. Canada’s sprawling wilderness to the north plays a big role in Canadian identity, as does the the country’s reputation for welcoming immigrants.

GDP: $1.7 trillion
Population: 36.7 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $48,390

5 – Finland

Geography defines the history and culture of northern Finland, one of the largest northern countries in the world. Surrounded by Scandinavia, Russia, the Baltic Sea and the Gulf of Bothnia, Finland and its large tracts of densely forested open land acts as a northern gate between West and East.

GDP: $251.9 billion
Population: 5.5 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $44,492

6 – Holland

Located along the periphery of Western Europe, the Netherlands is a freckled coastal plain, with windmills characteristic of its development around the water. Three major European rivers – the Rhine, Meuse and Scheldt – flow through neighboring Germany and Belgium at the country’s bustling ports.

GDP: $826.2 billion
Population: 17.1 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $53,933

7 – Switzerland

Switzerland, officially called the Swiss Federation, is a small country in Central Europe made up of 16,000 square miles of Alps, lakes and valleys carved out of glaciers. It is one of the richest countries in the world and has been known for centuries for its neutrality.

GDP: $678.9 billion
Population: 8.5 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $62,125

8 – Australia

The Commonwealth of Australia occupies the Australian continent. The country also includes a few islands., mainly Tasmania. Indigenous peoples occupied the land for at least 40,000 years before the first British settlements of the 18th century.

GDP: $1.3 trillion
Population: 24.6 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $50,391

9 – New Zealand

British and Polynesian influences travel through scenic New Zealand, an island nation in the Pacific Ocean, southeast of Australia. Early Maori settlers ceded sovereignty to British invaders with the Treaty of Waitangi in 1840, and European settlers invaded. Today, 70% of Kiwis – a common term for people living in New Zealand – are of European descent. A sense of pride has grown among Maori, the country’s original settlers, who now make up around 14%, as grievances from the motherland are more openly addressed.

GDP: $205.9 billion
Population: 4.8 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $39.012

10 – Belgium

The Kingdom of Belgium is a small, highly developed country and urbanized in Western Europe, surrounded by the Netherlands, Germany, Luxembourg, France and the North Sea. The nation known for beer, chocolate and castles has Dutch, French and German as official languages.

GDP: $492.7 billion
Population: 11.4 million
GDP per capita (GDP of a country divided by its population): $46,621

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Grayson Saunders

"Typical thinker. Unapologetic alcoholaholic. Internet fanatic. Pop culture advocate. Tv junkie."

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