Progress in the news - February 2011
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Progress in the News
- Growth target cut in quality of life push (The Standard 28.02.2011)
China has set a lower average annual economic growth target of 7 percent for 2011 to 2015, Premier Wen Jiabao has revealed.
- The HDI Tree: A Visual Representation (UNDP HDI Press Release 28.02.2011)
The HDI is an attempt to simplify and communicate the complexity of human development using a numerical representation. Yet, there are alternatives to these numerical representations that have not been much explored in the context of the HDI.
- GDP — an indicator of the prosperity of a ‘selected’ elite (Daily News and Analysis 27.02.2011)
I am sure many of you are rejoicing at what the papers had to say yesterday. India's gross domestic product (GDP) is going to shoot up even beyond the 9% we had hoped it would reach. Yippee.
- Cheerful kids make for happy adults (Sify News 27.02.2011)
Being happy and cheerful in teen years could be key to greater well being and satisfaction in adulthood, says new research.
- Happy kids make happy adults (The Times of India 26.02.2011)
New research has found that being a happy teenager is linked to increased well-being in adulthood.
- GDP does not equate happiness (The Star Online 26.02.2011)
Headline: “Rising China tops Japan as world's No. 2”. Looks like a big deal. Officially, the news came out of Tokyo two weeks ago when the Japanese government reported its economy shrank at a 1.1% annual rate in 4Q'10, a period when China's GDP surged 9.8% from a year earlier.
- The dream of happiness (China Daily 26.02.2011)
In Yevgeny Zamyatin's novel We, the author develops a society where everyone must feel happy. In Zamyatin's perfectly cheerful world, people subscribe to self-hypnosis by muttering to themselves "I am so happy ... so happy". If citizens do not accept this flawless utopia, the government's duty is to force happiness upon them.
- Happiness = Work, sleep and bicycles (BBC 25.02.2011)
"Overall, how happy did you feel yesterday?" We learned this week that that is one of four new questions being inserted into the Office for National Statistics (ONS) Household Survey as the UK's official number crunchers try to assess the well-being of the nation.
- For Unemployed, Length, Scale of Job Search Affects Wellbeing (Gallup 25.02.2011)
Life ratings, emotional wellbeing of the unemployed drops after 10 weeks of job searching
- How are you feeling today? Let the Government know in £2m 'well-being' survey (The Mail Online 25.02.2011)
Households up and down the country will soon be invited to judge whether they have 'worthwhile' lives in the nation's first 'wellbeing index'.
- Bhutan’s experiment with happiness (China Dialogue 25.02.2011)
By giving well-being a central role in policymaking, the tiny Kingdom of Bhutan has staged a trial that has gripped the world. Dipika Chhetri reports on the environmental impacts.
- Bhutan’s Pursuit of happiness (The Telegraph 25.02.2011)
In an attempt to transform the economy, the former king of Bhutan, Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck, ordered the formulation of the theory of GNH – gross national happiness - rather than GDP – gross domestic product in 1972.
- Social Progress = Economic Success: Social Innovation at Work (Harvard Business Review)
In recent months, business leaders been embarking on a new conversation in the U.S. about how our business, government and consumers will meet challenges around the environments, infrastructure, and of course, the economy.
- Statisticians to tackle ticklish issue of happiness (The Financial Times 24.02.2011)
Researchers will soon be able to pinpoint the UK’s saddest borough after the Office for National Statist ics explained how it aims to measure national wellbeing.
- ONS happiness survey questions revealed (BBC 24.02.2011)
Archbishop's happiness index fearGovernment 'to measure happiness' UK households are to be asked how satisfied they are with their lives in survey measuring happiness.
- Britain starts measuring national happiness (Asia One News 24.02.2011)
The Office of National Statistics (ONS) will soon begin asking new questions in its regular household survey to establish how satisfied people are with their lives - the latest step in an international move towards assessing national well-being using data outside traditional economic measures.
- U.K. Households to Rate ‘Life Satisfaction’ in Well-Being Poll (Bloomberg 24.02.2011)
U.K. households are to be asked to rate their “life satisfaction” as the country’s statistics office seeks to add a measure of well-being to its traditional economic indicators.
- ONS happiness questions revealed (The Telegraph 24.02.2011)
Hundreds of thousands of people will be asked whether they think the lives they lead are “worthwhile” as part of David Cameron’s plan to measure the nation’s wellbeing.
- China must measure happiness (China Dialogue 24.02.2011)
To sustain the benefits of China’s rapid ascension, politicians should broaden their policy goals, writes leading economist Hu Angang, setting out his prescription for a national happiness index.
- The dangers of happiness (China Dialogue 23.02.2011)
Economic growth may be an imperfect measure of human progress, but well-being indices are worse, writes Paul Ormerod. They furnish policymakers with misleading data – and an excuse to restrict our liberties.
- Restoring the balance (China Dialogue 23.02.2011)
Tim Jackson is a sustainability adviser to the British government and the author of Prosperity without Growth, a controversial rebuttal of GDP-focused notions of success. He explains his philosophy to Tan Copsey.
- The pursuit of organic happiness (Now News 23.02.2011)
This year’s Canadian Organic Growers conference started with author Silver Donald Cameron informing us of Bhutan’s pursuit of Gross National Happiness.
- How to make China happy (China Dialogue 21.02.2011)
China’s newfound focus on well-being will be useless without wider political reform, writes Tang Hao, as we continue our special series on happiness.
- Be happy, says Chinese province in new five-year plan (Guardian 22.02.2011)
China Dialogue: 'Happy Guangdong' initiative tempers single-minded pursuit of economic growth.
- How happily married are you? First attempt to measure nation's wellbeing (The Guardian 21.02.2011)
Almost half a million people will be asked whether they are happy with their marriages as part of the first official attempt to measure the nation’s “wellbeing”.
- The pursuit of happiness (China Dialogue 21.02.2011)
Does economic growth improve our lives? Are there better ways to measure welfare? How do GDP and the environment interact? Opening chinadialogue’s week-long series on well-being economics, Sam Geall talks to Cormac Cullinan, an attorney, campaigner and author of a manifesto for earth justice.
- Melbourne beats Sydney in world's most liveable city rankings (Sydney Morning Herald 21.02.2011)
Vancouver topped the list of the world's most liveable cities for the fifth straight year, while Melbourne claimed second place from Vienna and Australian and Canadian cities dominated the list's top 10 spots.
- A time to reflect: Charting the quality of life for black Americans (USA Today 22.02.2011)
As the country observes Black History Month, national figures show dramatic uphill changes over the last several decades in the quality of life for black Americans.
- Local governments pledge new focus on happiness (China News 22.02.2011)
China's new five-year plan period starts in 2011, and local governments across the country are mapping out their own plans. But this year, instead of economic growth, improving people's happiness is on the top of their agendas.
- Numbers, happiness and the Arab protests (Africa Review 22.02.2011)
That age is only a numeral is a well worn phrase made even more popular by the late American singer Aaliyah. But it would seem that when it comes to Arab governments, nothing could be further from the truth.
- Paying the price for prisons; counting the cost of crime (Australian Policy Online 21.02.2011)
Locking up law-breakers doesn't come cheap. In Western Australia, the Auditor General estimates that it costs the state up to $100 million dollars to deal with just 250 young offenders over the course of their lives as juveniles, from 10 to 17 years of age. That's a whopping $400 000 per child.
- Adelaide among the pacesetters (Adelaide Now 19.02.2011)
Today, 3.5 billion people live in cities across the world and, depending on one's source, Adelaide is about the 350th largest by population. A niche player by anyone's measure, predictions are by 2025 there will be 500 cities of greater than one million people.
- Macroeconomic indicators - Caution as economy overtakes Japan (Steel Guru 18.02.2011)
China Daily reported that China still has a long way to go to improve its economy despite formally overtaking Japan as the world's second largest economy.
- Forbes ranks Nashville 4th on list of 'brain magnets' (Nashville Business Journal 18.02.2011)
A high quality of life, a vibrant cultural and music scene and a diverse population make Nashville a desirable place to live," Forbes said of Nashville. "Low housing costs drive down the cost of living, which is even lower than in other affordable cities like Raleigh, Austin or Indianapolis. Nashville is also home to a growing health care industry."
- Kids Count data shows poverty, family play big roles in child's developmental years (Quincy Herald Whig 18.02.2011)
Illinois Kids Count proponents say the years between birth and age 8 are worth investing in.
- The World's Happiest Countries (Forbes 18.02.2011)
Most of the nations atop our list are democratic, business-friendly and boast strong social safety nets.
- GDP: Misleading governments, banks (The Deccan Herald 17.02.2011)
Statistical agencies use GDP, an inaccurate way that omits vital indicators of future trends.
- Q+A - Agenda and likely progress at this week's G20 meeting (Reuters 16.02.2011)
France will host a meeting of finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of 20 nations on Friday and Saturday.
- Indian consumers more optimistic about future: MasterCard survey (India Info Line 16.02.2010)
The Index score is calculated with zero as the most pessimistic, 100 as most optimistic and 50 as neutral.
- Volunteering (The Irish Times 15.02.2011)
The Irish saying “we live in one another’s shadow” suggests everyone has the capacity to contribute to the wellbeing of society.
- Why happiness suddenly matters (Maclean 15.02.2011)
If you’re a politician, there are only a couple of ways you can tackle the falling-income problem
- Life getting worse for over-50s, says Saga (StockMarket Wire 15.02.2011)
The quality of life for Britain’s 21 million people over 50 has worsened in the past year, a new report claims.
- Caution as China's economy overtakes Japan's (xinhuanet 15.02.2011)
China still has a long way to go to improve its economy, despite formally overtaking Japan as the world's second largest economy, experts said.
- The Experience Economy (New York TImes Opinion14.02.2011)
It could be that the nature of technological change isn’t causing the slowdown but a shift in values. It could be that in an industrial economy people develop a materialist mind-set and believe that improving their income is the same thing as improving their quality of life.
- Growth and other concerns (The Hindu 14.02.2011)
GNP growth can, of course, be very helpful in advancing living standards and in battling poverty (one would have to be quite foolish not to see that), but there is little case for confusing (1) the important role of economic growth as means for achieving good things, and (2) growth of inanimate objects of convenience being taken to be an end in itself.
- New bid to gauge how happy we are (Witney Gazette 14.02.2011)
The work, by the Office of National Statistics (ONS), is part of Prime Minister David Cameron’s drive to track happiness levels, alongside economic growth measures such as gross domestic product (GDP), as a barometer of national progress.
- George MacKerron: 'I can measure how happy you are – and why' (The Guardian 13.02.2011)
George MacKerron is the inventor of Mappiness, an iPhone app that collates information from thousands of people to find out when, where and why we are at our happiest
- Father time key to well-being (Sydney Morning Herald 13.02.2011)
Fathers can shake off their "assistant parent" tag by spending more time with their children without having mothers around.
- Patriotism, well-being linked: Study (PressTV 13.02.2011)
The more satisfied people, especially those with lower incomes and from poorer nations, are with their country, the better they feel about their lives.
- 3 Key Factors for S'pore's wellbeing: MM Lee (Asia One News 12.02.2010)
Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew said Singapore can expect slower growth this year, but that the 4% to 6% growth forecast is still 'very good'.
- How the Coalition’s Freedom Agenda will promote happiness (The Independent 11.02.2010)
Modern psychology shows that a nation’s happiness is, in part, related to the degree of freedom its citizens are afforded.
- Feeling good about country leads to well being (The Times of India 10.02.2011)
The more satisfied people are with their country, the better they feel about their lives, especially people in low income groups or in relatively poor countries.
- Spread the wealth (The Economist 10.02.2011)
The impressive growth figures of resource-rich African countries are not all good news
- The Shoe Thrower's index (The Economist 09.02.2011)
In this week's print edition we ran a table showing a number of indicators for members of the Arab League.
- Egyptian, Tunisian Quality of Life Drops, But GDP Rises (Arutz Sheva 09.02.2011)
For the past five years the quality of life for Egyptians and Tunisians has deteriorated despite an increase in the GDP, according to the Gallup survey organization.
- Community matters most for well-being (Wales Online 07.02.2011)
A sense of community and family relationships are the things that matter most to people’s well-being, according to the Office for National Statistics.
- Solano County 2010 economic index shows progress (North Bay Business Journal 07.02.2011)
No longer considered to be a rest stop between the Bay Area and Sacramento, Solano County is making its mark as an emerging center for micro business employment and life sciences, although the region faces increasing challenges on education and incomes.
- Free online journal from VUW asks what makes us happy (Wellington Scoop 07.02.2011)
An open access online journal devoted to the study of human wellbeing, co-founded by Victoria University’s Dan Weijers, has been launched to help academics and practitioners’ worldwide better understand what makes people flourish and thrive.
- Quality of life issues have quantifiable economic benefits (GoDanRiver 06.02.2011)
Recently, it’s been announced that Danville may be facing a rather large budget deficit and many people have been speculating on the best way to make those cuts. Some have compared the local city budget to General Motor’s recent turnaround — a turnaround that was actually made possible by a $30 billion federal infusion of bailout funds. Here, locally, we don’t have the benefit of the federal government handouts. We have to make our way on our own.
- Obama measures 'true progress' (CNN 05.02.2011)
President Obama defined the "true measure of progress" for America in his weekly address Saturday. Focusing on his goal to "win the future" for the second consecutive week, he turned his attention to recent unemployment numbers and jobs.
- Norway Number One in Quality of Life, Tech-Savviness (Reuters 04.02.2011)
When it comes to smartphones these days, if you’re somewhere between a Luddite and a technophile then you’re probably doing OK.
- Quality of life study is worth reviewing for Oklahoma policymakers (News OK 04.02.2011)
Albanians live longer than Oklahomans.That's right. The residents of a Balkan state best known to Americans as staunch Soviet allies during the Cold War live longer than the average Oklahoman's 75.6 years.
- When strengthening the state, don’t sacrifice well-being (The Badger Herald 03.02.2011)
Wisconsin’s high quality of life is due in large part to our commitment to providing social services to our citizens.
- Gallup- Egypt, Tunisia Chaos Not Tied to Wealth Rise (NewsMax 03.02.2011)
In the two Middle Eastern countries being rocked by mass uprisings, polling suggests that a general dissatisfaction not tied to economic fortunes might be driving anti-government revolts, the National Journal reports.
- Gross National Happiness (The Daily Princetonian 03.02.2011)
Since the Great Recession, it seems as though political discourse adheres to one simple principle: if it don’t make dollars, it don’t make sense
- Egyptians', Tunisians' Wellbeing Plummets Despite GDP Gains (Gallup 02.02.2011)
Traditional economic indicators paint an incomplete picture of life in these countries
- Students Index Corruption (The Prague Post 02.02.2011)
zIndex find two-thirds of contracted money is unaccounted for.
- Taking stock- Alternative indicators of national well-being (Asia Research News 02.02.2011)
Once, GDP was the established benchmark of a country’s progress. Now, new and sophisticated indexes offer a more rounded picture of the condition of society — and IDRC is helping develop them.
- We have to go beyond GDP... to the real opportunities, real freedoms- Amartya Sen (Business Today 01.02.2011)
Amartya Sen, Argumentative Indian, Harvard Professor, Nobel Laureate and formerly Master of Trinity, held forth on the idea of "inclusive growth" in an informal chat with BT several weeks before the CII launched its India Inclusive campaign in Davos.
- Canada's Windsor-Essex Region Collaborates With IBM to Improve Quality of Life for Citizens (PR NewsWire 01.02.2011)
Through the region's innovative use of IBM software and services, asthma attacks have been alleviated, a local automobile manufacturing plant diversified into the aerospace industry and 250 tons of waste materials from a road construction project was made into new housing for those who needed it the most.
- Appreciating Happiness (Bejing Review 01.02.2011)
China Central Television released the results of its recent happiness survey on January 12. The results show that almost 45 percent of more than 80,000 respondents-all Chinese-feel happy or very happy; about 11 percent are not happy.
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