Wikiprogress RSS Feed

Share/Save/Bookmark

From Wikiprogress.org

Jump to:navigation, search


Contents

News

23/05/2012 Canadian Index of Wellbeing Online DiscussionNewHP.png

20/05/2012 Report released China’s life satisfaction, 1990–2010NewHP.png

15/05/2012 Report released Africa Human Development Report 2012NewHP.png

11/05/2012 Report released Asia-Pacific Human Development Report 2012

07/05/2012 Report released Measuring Well-being in Cities - A Literature Review

30/04/2012 Now available: Wikiprogress April 2012 eBrief

30/04/2012 Draft document National Initiatives on Measuring Well-Being

20/04/2012 African Conference on Measuring Well-being and Fostering the Progress of Societies

19/04/2012 World Bank report released Africa's Pulse Vol. 5

16/04/2012 Call for papers Expert meeting on social capital

Previous News...

In the Spotlight

CP-left.gif   CP-home.gif CP-MR.gif CP-BR.gif CP-Spot.gif CP-Papers.gif CP-Apps.gif


In the spotlight - current

Your Better Life Index

The OECD has just released a new version of its Your Better Life Index (http://www.oecdbetterlifeindex.org/) -- an online, interactive tool through which you can look at how countries perform according to the importance users give to the various components of well-being. The updated version integrates data on gender and inequality and strengthens existing topics. Visitors to Your Better Life Index will now be able to compare their well-being priorities to those of other users by country, age and gender, and share their results. The updated Index also includes two new countries, Russia and Brazil. The Index is available in French and is embeddable for websites and blogs.

Join the Canadian Index of Wellbeing Online Discussion: as part of Civil Society, how the Canadian Index of Wellbeing (CIW) is leading change

Have your say and be a part of the conversation shaping the future of measuring what matters. The discussion focuses on the next phase of the progress movement and seeks contribution from all interested individuals and organisations.

Go to the Canadian Index of Wellbeing Online Discussion

In the spotlight - archive

Join the conversation and have your say - CIW online discussion

Join the Canadian Index of Wellbeing Online Discussion: as part of Civil Society, how the Canadian Index of Wellbeing (CIW) is leading change

Have your say and be a part of the conversation shaping the future of measuring what matters. The discussion focuses on the next phase of the progress movement and seeks contribution from all interested individuals and organisations.

Go to the Canadian Index of Wellbeing Online Discussion

Whole Child Virtual Conference

Whole Child Virtual Conference.png

The 2012 ASCD Whole Child Virtual Conference will explore what outstanding schools, communities, and individuals have done as they move along the whole child approach continuum from implementation to sustainability to culture.

The online event runs from May 3–11, 2012. Presenters will share their knowledge and expertise with participants on developing a whole child approach to education.

Join the Virtual Conference and learn more about Whole Child ASCD.


Global Well-Being - who is suffering and who is thriving

Gallup has released findings from their Global Well-Being Survey, which show that an average of 13% of adults around the world rate their lives as "suffering". Gallup classifies survey respondents according to "thriving", "struggling" and "suffering" based on how each respondent rates their current and future lives on a scale of 0 to 10. Gallup rates people to be suffering if they indicate their lives as 4 or lower. Average global suffering has remained relatively unstable over the last 11 years.

The results found that the percentage rating themselves as "suffering" was as high as 45% in Bulgaria and as low as 1% or less in the United Arab Emirates, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Canada, Thailand, and Brazil.

One in four or more residents in 18 countries rated their lives poorly enough to be classified as suffering.

See more findings More Than One in 10 "Suffering" Worldwide

The Vietnam Urbanisation Review

Vietnam Urbanisation Review.jpeg

The Vietnam Urbanisation Report, released this week by the World Bank, warns that the rapid urbanisation of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City could make home ownership increasingly unattainable for residents and cause transportation gridlock.

The report argues that Vietnam can more successfully harness the economic and social opportunities of urbanisation and mitigate the challenges it poses if the urbanisation process is managed in a way that will benefit all segments of society.

See more and download the report: Vietnam Urbanisation Review


UN High Level Meeting on Happiness and Wellbeing

On Monday, the United Nations hosted a High level meeting on Happiness and Well Being Defining a New Economic Paradigm and put happiness on the global agenda. There has been extensive media coverage on the event that was attended by leading progress thinkers, academics and economists.

A question raised in the meeting: should happiness figure in a nation’s bottom line? And should the concept of Gross National Product be replaced by Gross National Happiness? Bhutan’s Prime Minister Jigmi Y. Thinley told spoke at the meeting and said that it not only should but that it must if mankind is to avoid its current unsustainable and self-destructive course. "The GDP-lead development model that compels boundless growth on a planet with limited resources no longer makes economic sense. It is the cause of our irresponsible, immoral and self-destructive actions," Thinley said. "The purpose of development must be to create enabling conditions through public policy for the pursuit of the ultimate goal of happiness by all citizens."


See more media articles related to this meeting: High-level Meeting on Happiness and Well-being - Media review


Putting happiness on the global agenda

HappinessSmile.jpg

Next week, the United Nations will implement Resolution 65/309, adopted unanimously by the General Assembly in July 2011, placing “happiness” on the global agenda. High level meeting on Happiness and Well Being Defining a New Economic Paradigm will be hosted at UN headquarters in New York and will be attended by leading economists, scholars and spiritual and civil society leaders, representing both developed and developing nations.

The meeting is intended to initiate next steps towards realizing the vision of a new well being and sustainability based economic paradigm that effectively integrates economic, social, and environmental objectives.

This New York Times article discusses what has become known as the "UN Happiness Project". UN Happiness Project (New York Times 26.03.2012)

See also:



Global Human Development Forum 2012

Mela crowds.jpeg

Global Human Development Forum in Istanbul this week to focus on sustainability and equity as priorities for “Rio + 20” conference

The forum will be convened three months before world leaders gather in Brazil for the “Rio + 20” U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development, the Istanbul Forum will provide a unique and timely opportunity for a fresh examination of the critical social, economic and environmental challenges now facing the world community.

The Forum, an initiative of UNDP’s Human Development Report Office and Bureau of Development Policy, is co-sponsored by the Government of Turkey.

The 2011 Human Development Report —“Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All”— will serve as the overarching framework for the Istanbul dialogue.

The two-day symposium will culminate with an “Istanbul Declaration” articulating agreed goals and priorities for the “Rio+20” UN Conference on Sustainable Development in June 2012.

See more details about the conference

Putting inequality in the post 2015 picture

There’s a growing consensus among the countries, UN agencies and civil society organisations involved in discussions on the post-2015 development agenda that equity, or inequality, needs to be somehow integrated into any new framework.

This report from the Overseas Development Institute focuses on the challenge of inequality across all 8 Millennium Development Goals post 2015.

See more and download the report.


International Women's Day on Wikigender: Connecting Girls and Inspiring Futures

Wikigender logo.png
Each year around the world, International Women's Day (IWD) is celebrated on March 8. Thousands of events occur not just on this day but throughout March to mark the economic, political and social achievements of women.

The theme for 2012 is connecting girls and inspiring futures. Our sister wiki, Wikigender, is one of the many ICT tools that are connecting girls and women across the globe and developing knowledge and understanding on key gender issues. See how Wikigender Partners celebrated this year's 2012 IWD.

Read highlights from the Wikigender online discussion: How can access to ICTs promote opportunities for women and girls?

State of the World's Children 2012

More than half of the world’s 7 billion people now live in urban areas. What does this mean for children? UNICEF has dedicated the 2012 edition of its flagship report, The State of the World’s Children, to the situation of children growing up in urban settings. Cities are known to generate economic growth – but, as the report reveals, not all children are benefiting from urban expansion. In this increasingly urban world, the absence of a sustained focus on child rights means that some children are being left behind.

See more and download the report: State of the World's Children 2012



China 2030 Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society

China 2030 Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society REPORT.jpeg
Report released this week by the World Bank and the Development Research Center of China’s State Council has suggested a new development strategy for China to balance governance, market, private sector and society to 2030.

The report, “China 2030: Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society”, recommends steps to deal with the risks facing China over the next 20 years, including the risk of a hard landing in the short term, as well as challenges posed by an ageing and shrinking workforce, rising inequality, environmental stresses, and external imbalances.

The report lays out six strategic directions for China’s future:

Completing the transition to a market economy; Accelerating the pace of open innovation; Going “green” to transform environmental stresses into green growth as a driver for development; Expanding opportunities and services such as health, education and access to jobs for all people; Modernizing and strengthening its domestic fiscal system; Seeking mutually beneficial relations with the world by connecting China’s structural reforms to the changing international economy.

See more and download the report China 2030 Building a Modern, Harmonious, and Creative High-Income Society



Forget about GDP. The real question is are we happy?

In 1968 Bobby Kennedy stated "GDP measures everything except that which makes life worthwhile”. In recent years there has been an explosion of activity around the world with organisations developing new and innovative ways of measuring progress.

This article from the Gazette looks at the most recent developments in the movement to look beyond economic indicators in measuring well-being. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has been one of the leaders in this movement with the Better Life Index, How's Life publication and Wikiprogress. The United Nations General Assembly has adopted a non-binding resolution whose goal is to make happiness a “development indicator.”

The OECD initiative and the UN resolution did not come out of the blue. In recent years, there has been increased recognition that public policies based on gross domestic product data alone are not serving people well. In 2008, even before the global economic meltdown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy asked three well-known economists – Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen, both Nobel laureates, and Jean-Paul Fitoussi – to find a better way of measuring social and economic well-being than the usual standby, GDP.

Read the full article- Forget about GDP. The real question is are we happy?

Read more on progress and comprehensive indicators


Caribbean Human Development Report 2012


Caribbean Human Development Report 2012.jpeg

The theme for the 2012 Caribbean Human Development Report is: Human Development and the Shift to Better Citizen Security.

The report says that with the exception of Barbados and Suriname, homicide rates including gang-related killings have increased substantially in the last 12 years across the Caribbean, while they have been falling or stabilizing in other parts of the world.

Although murder rates are exceedingly high by world standards, the report says that Caribbean governments can reverse the trend , calling for regional governments to beef up public institutions to tackle crime and violence —including the criminal justice system—while boosting preventive measures.

The new study recommends that Caribbean governments implement youth crime prevention through education, as well as provide employment opportunities that target the marginalized urban poor. A shift in focus is needed it says, from a state protection approach to one that focuses on citizen security and participation, promoting law enforcement that is fair, accountable, and more respectful of human rights.

The Caribbean Human Development Report reviews the current state of crime as well as national and regional policies and programmes to address the problem in seven English- and Dutch-speaking Caribbean countries: Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Guyana, Jamaica, Saint Lucia, Suriname, and Trinidad and Tobago.

Download the report


See more and contribute to the Wikiprogress article on the Caribbean Human Development Report 2012


Regret and Subjective Well-being


Goodbye sun.jpg

Bronwyn Bare, a nurse working in palliative care in Australia has recorded the most common regrets of the dying dying: first on her blog, Inspiration and Chai and more recently in her book, The Top Five Regrets of the Dying - A Life Transformed by the Dearly Departing, (Balboa Press, 2011). Her findings from conversations with people in their last 12 weeks of life have resonated strongly with current discussions on subjective well-being.
Read the Guardian article on the top five regrets of the dying..
Read also, commentary from The World Bank Impact Evaluations blog and commentary by Nic Marks, well-being expert at the new economics foundation.

See more and contribute to the Wikiprogress article on Subjective Well-being


UN High Level Panel Report on Global Sustainability -- Resilient People, Resilient Planet: A Future Worth Choosing

GSPreport cover.jpg

A 22-member Panel was established by the Secretary-General in August 2010 to formulate a new blueprint for sustainable development and low-carbon prosperity. The Panel's final report, "Resilient People, Resilient Planet: A Future Worth Choosing", contains 56 recommendations to put sustainable development into practice and to mainstream it into economic policy as quickly as possible.


Resilient People, Resilient Planet: A Future Worth Choosing (full report)

Overview of the Report

Click here to view the United Nations Press Release of the launch of the report.

The Panel Report in the media:


Read more and contribute to the Wikiprogress article on sustainable development.



Egypt, One Year On

The uprising on Jauary 25 th 2011 in Cairo’s Tahrir Square began a wave of protest that spread throughout Egypt and lead to the fall of the Mubarak regime. In honour of the one year anniversary, the Thomson Reuters Foundation has released a documentary on the Egyptian revolution.





Highlights from the 2012 World Future Energy Summit

The United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon spoke at the opening of the World Future Energy Summit and called on governments to address energy poverty and to support innovation that makes energy more sustainable.
Renewable energy organisations presented their latest innovations at the Summit, both timely and appropriate to start 2012 the International Year of Sustainability for All.

RenewableEnergy.jpeg

Media highlights





2011 Democracy Index

Democracy Index 2011 red and green.png

The results of the Economist Intelligence Unit’s (EIU) Democracy Index 2011 show that democracy has been under intense pressure in many parts of the world. In most regions the average democracy score for 2011 is lower than in 2010, including the developed countries of North America and Western Europe. There was a decline in the average score for Eastern Europe and small declines for both Asia and Latin America. These were offset by increase in average scores in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) and Sub-Saharan Africa.

Download the 2011 Democracy Index

2011 The Year in Data

The Guardian data blog has gathered the biggest data stories of 2011 and are showcasing the figures that gripped the headlines and defined the year that was.

2011 The Year in Data Journalism and Charts (Guardian Data Blog 30.12.2011)

Mela crowds.jpeg

Numbers include: 30 - the number of workers at Japan’s Fuskushima power plant who were exposed to radiation over 100msv after the Tsunami in May destroyed the plant’s safety system. 48% - the youth unemployment rate in Spain and the worst rate in Europe. 3927 - number of people arrested following the London riots in August 951 - is the number of Occupy protests (as of October 2011) in 82 countries

Read the Guardian data blog post on the top data stories of 2011 for all facts and figures reflecting the year that was.

Global Corruption Perception Index reflects Arab Spring Unrest

CPIndex.png

The 2011 Global Corruption Perceptions Index scores 183 countries and territories from 0 (highly corrupt) to 10 (very clean) based on perceived levels of public sector corruption. It uses data from 17 surveys that look at factors such as enforcement of anti-corruption laws, access to information and conflicts of interest.
New Zealand ranks first, followed by Finland and Denmark. Somalia and North Korea (included in the index for the first time), are last.
Most Arab Spring countries rank in the lower half of the index, scoring below 4. Before the Arab Spring, a Transparency International report on the region warned that nepotism, bribery and patronage were so deeply engrained in daily life that even existing anti-corruption laws had little impact.
Download the report and see the data on the interactive map
In the media: Global corruption index reflects Arab Spring unrest (Reuters 30.11.2011)

Fourth High Level Conference on Aid Effectiveness opens in Busan, Korea

Busan4th logo.jpg

From 29 November to 1 December 2011, approximately 2000 delegates will review global progress in improving the impact and effectiveness of aid, and make commitments that set a new agenda for development.

Ministers from across the globe, from both developing and donor countries, government representatives, parliamentarians, civil society organisations and private sector representatives will come together for the Fourth High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness at the Bexco convention centre in Busan, Korea.
See Event Page for more...


Stories from "Perspectives on Global Development 2012: Social Cohesion in a Shifting World"

PGD.gif

In 2011, the world witnessed mass citizen mobilisation. From Tahrir square to the Puerta del Sol, from the streets of Tunis to the avenues of New Delhi, calls for more social and economic justice, political participation, transparency and openness have resounded. These aspirations for greater social cohesion, with fair chances for everybody in society, are rooted in profound global economic transformations that have taken place over the last two decades. The new geography of growth brings new financial resources to fast growing countries while at the same time uncovering new challenges which require action and long-term commitment from governments, underlining an opportunity that is too good to be missed.

In this context, the OECD Development Centre and the Club de Madrid will jointly launch "Perspectives on Global Development 2012 – Social Cohesion in a Shifting World" on 21 November 2011. The report is the second book inItalic text the series of publications from the OECD Development Centre (the first one was on "Shifting Wealth"). The 2012 edition focuses specifically on social cohesion, and the launch on 21 November will be an opportunity to raise the following questions:




Follow the launch of the report live on the Wikiprogress Twitter account.

East Asian and Pacific children most vulnerable to climate change – UN report

The living conditions of millions of children across East Asia and the Pacific will be worsened by climate change, says a United Nations report released on November 14th. It argues that rising temperatures put them at greater risk of contracting diseases such as cholera and malaria, and natural disasters, negatively affect children's livelihoods and increase malnutrition rates. See here for UN News article on the Report.

Visit Wikichild for more stories on child well-being and climate change.

UNICEF Children Climate Report.jpg

2011 Human Development Report launch

HDR 2011 EN Cover.jpeg

The Human Development Report 2011 was launched on Wednesday the 2nd of November.

About the report

Although living standards in most countries have been rising and converging for several decades, the 2011 Human Development Report projects a disturbing reversal of those trends if environmental deterioration and social inequalities continue to intensify, with the least developed countries diverging downwards from global patterns of progress by 2050.

Titled "Sustainability and Equity: A Better Future for All," the 2011 Report calls for new approaches to global development financing and environmental controls, arguing that these measures are both essential and feasible and that the challenges of sustainability and equity must be addressed together.

The Report will also feature the 2011 Human Development Index—a composite measure of health, education and income—and its complementary indices.

Joseph Stiglitz talks about going Beyond GDP

Discussion continues about measuring progress. Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz talked about the new means of measuring progress well-being and sustainability during his recent participation at the [SSF Conference].


Joseph Stiglitz talks about going beyond GDP


OECD Releases "How's Life?" Report

The "How's Life?" Report released on 12 October by the OECD gathers and analyses indicators on the well-being of individuals and households to deepen the analysis of the drivers of well-being. It is structured along the dimensions identified by the Stiglitz Commission, and focuses on both average conditions of households and specific population groups in OECD and selected non-OECD countries to enrich the Your Better Life Index (of the Better Life Initiative) with new countries and indicators. See here for the full Report

How's Life.PNG

The Economist progress comparison- India and China

Chasing the dragon (The Economist 03.10.2011)

How the Asian superpowers compare on various measures of development

In the recent Singapore Grand Prix, a car belonging to the Force India team reached the finish line just 111 seconds after the leader. Today’s chart uses a stopwatch to compare India’s progress in development against another pace-setter, China. The chart shows the number of years that have elapsed since China passed the development milestones that India has now reached. India’s income per head, for example, was about $3,200 in 2009 (holding purchasing power constant across time and between countries). China reached that level of development nine years ago. The lag in social progress is much longer. A child’s odds of surviving past their fifth birthday are as bad in India today as they were in China in the 1970s. Moreover, the chart does not necessarily imply that India in nine years’ time will be as rich as China is today. That is because China grew faster in the last nine years than India is likely to grow over the next nine. We stopped the clock at $3200 per head. But China did not stop racing ahead. See the full Economist article with graph


Gallup Well-Being Index finds the majority of Germans are ‘struggling’

Germans Rate Their Lives Worse Than Americans, Britons (Gallup 27.09.2011)

Fewer than half in Germany are "thriving," while a majority are "struggling"

Germans rate their lives worse on average than do adults living in the U.K. and the U.S., according to the inaugural findings from the Germany Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. Less than half, 41.1%, of Germans rate their current lives and expectations for their lives in five years high enough to be classified as "thriving," compared with 52% of Britons and 52.9% of Americans who say the same. Relatively few Germans are "suffering," but a majority are "struggling." Read full article


Global Women's Progress Report

To measure the state of women’s progress, Newsweek ranked 165 countries, looking at five areas that affect women’s lives: treatment under the law, workforce participation, political power, and access to education and health care. Poring over data from the United Nations and the World Economic Forum, among others, and consulting with experts and academics, we measured 28 factors to come up with our rankings.

See the article Global Women's Progress Report from Newsweek

This article is timely, as the World Bank are hosting the The Open Forum on Gender Equality


Education 2011- statistics compared by country

On the 13th of September the OECD launched Education at a Glance 2011 in order to take stock of where education is today and where it might be headed. A few articles selected below give a detailed analysis of Education at a Glance 2011 - see the Education at a Glance 2011 - Media Review for a round up of all media coverage.



Child Well-being: Global study on Neonatal Mortality covering 20 years and 193 countries

The World Health Organisation and Save the Children released this week the most comprehensive study to date, finding that newborn deaths decrease but account for higher share of global child death. The study which was published in the PloS (Public Library of Science journal) of Medicine on Tuesday found that almost 99 percent of newborn or neonatal deaths occur in the developing world. It also found that more than half of these deaths happen in five countries -- India, Nigeria, Pakistan, China and Democratic Republic of Congo. Afghan babies face the greatest risks -- with one in 19 dying in the first month of life. India has more than 900,000 newborn deaths per year, nearly 28 percent of the global total.

See also:


Progress in Libya

Small Flag of Libyan Arab Jamahiriya.jpg

Wikiprogress is creating a series of articles on the Arab Spring revolutions; data mapping the progress/regress of each nation involved in the Arab Spring is being updated in the relevent country articles. See Progress in Libya, the first of the Arab Spring articles to be created.


See also progress in Libya in the media


The web turns twenty

On Saturday August the 6th, the world wide web had it's 20th birthday. The Economist celebrated with an article dedicated to the evolution of the web and what progress has been made over the last 20 years.

The web turns twenty - Difference Engine: Happy anniversary? from The Economist
It is always a little disconcerting to realise a generation has grown up never knowing what it was like to manage without something that is taken for granted today. A case in point: the World Wide Web, which celebrated the 20th anniversary of its introduction last Saturday. It is no exaggeration to say that not since the invention of the printing press has a new media technology altered the way people think, work and play quite so extensively. With the web having been so thoroughly embraced socially, politically and economically, the world has become an entirely different place from what it was just two decades ago. Whether the web has made it a better place or a worse one is for readers to decide. Read full article

Link to full text Difference Engine: Happy anniversary? (The Economist 12.08.2011)


The promotion of global wellbeing can drive the development agenda

It might seem inappropriate to focus on wellbeing when there is a famine in east Africa, but it could provide a longer-term perspective that helps us to address the roots of such crises Article from the Guardian Global Development Blog

With pictures of starving children again on our TV screens nightly, the focus of current international development efforts is very much on the short-term imperative of saving lives. Talk of living "well" may seem over-optimistic just now, inappropriate even.

However, a focus on human wellbeing provides a new and powerful perspective on the challenges facing humanity today – and one with a greater potential to confront the roots of crises such as that experienced in east Africa today than is provided by the standard development agenda.


Link to full text


What makes people happy? CGD on subjective well-being


The Center for Global Development has released an essay on subjective well-being. See the abstract below on link to the full article.

Abstract There is a burgeoning academic literature on happiness polls that has used a range of different measures and approaches across countries rich and poor alike to answer the question, “what makes people say they are happy?” The excitement surrounding this work is well justified. These polls suggest an idea of happiness that would be broadly understood by philosophers from Aristotle to Mill to Rawls or Parfit. Happiness studies also suggest some potential reasons why we appear to act irrationally according to the dictates of revealed-preference-utility-maximization. Subjective-well-being (SWB) polls also help to illustrate some of the absurdities of taking income per capita as our measure of the ultimate good. At the same time, a lot of things we surely care about are not reflected in SWB poll answers. Cross-country studies involving economies and societies at distinctly different levels of development suggest a limited role for income, rights, health and social factors all combined in explaining SWB. And all the usual criticisms of and concerns with utilitarianism apply to SWB polls. Polls do not capture a be-all and end-all measure of the good. Both because of the difficulty of interpreting SWB evidence with regard to SWB-maximizing policy and because it appears clear that SWB (on whichever measure) is probably not what we want to maximize, considerable caution is required in the use of such polls for policymaking.

Link to full text


Happiness should have greater role in development policy – UN Member States

The General Assembly today called on United Nations Member States to undertake steps that give more importance to happiness and well-being in determining how to achieve and measure social and economic development.

In a resolution adopted without a vote, the Assembly invited countries “to pursue the elaboration of additional measures that better capture the importance of the pursuit of happiness and well-being in development with a view to guiding their public policies.”

Read full article from UN News Centre



New Directions in Welfare Congress

This congress is jointly organised by the OECD, The Open University, Oxford University and Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, and is addressed to economists, statisticians and policy-analysts. It builds on the event held last year at Oxford University and sponsored by the UK’s Government Economics Service to celebrate Amartya Sen’s 75th anniversary and his contributions to welfare economics.

The range of papers and topics will follow a similar pattern to the Oxford Conference which was attended by over 130 economists and generated a special issue of the Journal of Public Economics in honor of Professor Amartya Sen. The event will welcome contributions from theorists and empiricists alike who are interested in broadening our understanding of the economics of welfare which continues to flourish. Following work by Sen, Stiglitz and others that has helped to bring about the Sarkozy Report, the EU’s Beyond GDP memorandum and a number of other initiatives, the congress particularly welcomes papers relating to the theoretical or empirical economics of Health, Development, Social Policy, Environment, Labour, Education, Childhood, Aging, Migration, Culture, Happiness, Equality and Equity, Behavioural Economics and Life course issues – any area of economics, in fact, closely interested in understanding the economics of human welfare. Previously nearly a third of papers came from the following areas where there will again be strands: Social Choice, Utility Theory, Experimental Economics and Philosophical Foundations of Economic Theory.

This year’s congress will be opened by the OECD Secretary-General and will feature a policy-focused day comprising several roundtables, followed by two days of empirical and theoretical research presented by some 100 economic researchers from Europe and beyond. The first day will include presentations by OECD colleagues, the World Bank, EBRD, WHO and the EU on topics such as:

Broadening the Measurement of Economic Progress Opportunities for Improving Health and Health Services MDGs: Achievements and Challenges in Development. The overall focus will be on areas of economic analysis relating to national and international social and public policy agendas.

See more details New Directions in Welfare event article

See all video interviews from the event


ODI Mapping progress- evidence for a new development outlook

"We believe that by providing robust and accessible information on progress at national level, Development Progress Stories will offer lessons for policymakers and support the evidence base for continued international engagement." ODI Director, Dr Alison Evans.



The past two decades have delivered unprecedented progress and improvements in quality of life across the developing world. Poverty has fallen in most developing countries, and the number of low-income countries fell from 60 in 2003 to just 39 in 2009. Countries such as India and (particularly) China have managed to lift very large numbers of people out of extreme poverty. Progress has not been restricted to increases in income; many developing countries have also dramatically improved their access to vital services, such as education and health. Read more on the report

Media highlights from the ODI report release



(H)activate - developers producing web, SMS and smartphone solutions to change the world

H-activate developers produce wonders in a weekend (The Guardian Technology Blog 21.06.2011)

Over the course of just two days the developers involved in the hackathon produced web, SMS and smartphone solutions to change the world – and present at Activate on Wednesday. A gaggle of geeks descended on the Guardian's HQ at King's Cross on the weekend with a simple yet ambitious brief to develop ideas to change the world. And boy did they did deliver.

The two-day hackathon – organised by the Guardian and Rewired State as part of this year's Activate Summit, which celebrates the role web technologies play in shaping a better global future – saw developers from as far afield as the Netherlands, Germany, India and sub-Saharan Africa join forces with their domestic counterparts to build a range of apps for good... read more on the Guardian

(H)activate is part of the 2011 Guardian Activate Summit



United Nations Development Dialogue - the Millennium Development Goals

The United Nations General Assembly’s Development Dialogue held on Tuesday addressed the progress made toward achieving in 2015 Millennium Development Goals. Asha Rose Migiro, UN deputy secretary-general, addressed the Assembly stating 'We have a framework that will tell us where the money is coming from, where it is going, and how effectively it is being spent, the ability to track resources and results is critical for ensuring that all partners deliver on their commitments, and that we are achieving tangible progress in achieving our goals.' See a round up of media highlights below.



United Nations Report Declares Internet Access a Human Right

A United Nations report said Friday that disconnecting people from the internet is a human rights violation and against international law. Included in the report is a section dedicated to protesting the blocking internet access to quell political unrest. 
Flag of the United Nations.png

While blocking and filtering measures deny users access to specific content on the Internet, states have also taken measures to cut off access to the Internet entirely. The Special Rapporteur considers cutting off users from internet access, regardless of the justification provided, including on the grounds of violating intellectual property rights law, to be disproportionate and thus a violation of article 19, paragraph 3, of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

See more on the Threat Level Blog.

See the full report Report of the Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, Frank La Rue



2011 Global Peace Index

The 2011 Global Peace Index (GPI), released today by the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), shows a decline in levels of world peace for the third consecutive year. According to the GPI, levels of peacefulness in 2011 were most impacted by the threat of terrorist attack and the likelihood of violent demonstrations.


See also: Global Peace Index, Vision of Humanity website



The Economist online debate on Happiness

Join The Economist online debate 'This house believes that new measures of economic and social progress are needed for 21st-century economy.'
HappinessSmile.jpg

Emeritus Professor of Economics, London School of Economics
Surely the quality of life, as people experience it, has got to be a key measure of progress and a central objective for any government.


Economist and author, "The Death of Economics"
Government attempts to increase measured happiness, rather than making life better for us, may well actually do the opposite.



United Nations Conference on the Least Developed Countries

UN opens forum on unlocking economic potential of world’s poorest countries (UN News Centre 09.05.2011)

A major United Nations conference aimed at devising a new strategy to help the world’s poorest countries unlock their economic potential and accelerate development opened today in Turkey, where of heads of State and senior officials from international organizations are among7,000 participants in attendance. The Fourth UN Conference on Least Developed Countries (LDCs) in Istanbul will assess the implementation of the Brussels Programme of Action – the outcome document adopted at the last such conference, held in 2001 – and try to reach agreement on a new set of support measures for the 48 nations classifiedas LDCs.



Progress is education for all

Winners of the OECD's 50th Anniversary Video Competition have been annouced. The competition invited young people worldwide to create a short video describing their vision of Progress. 'Progress is Education for all' (video below) was voted number 1 by the public. See the top 3 videos and special mentions on the OECD 50th Anniversary Video Competition page.


Nic Marks on The Happiness Manifesto


Nic Marks gives a great talk at TEDx Danubia 2011. Nic Marks is the found of the Centre for Well-being at Nef (the New Economics Foundation). In his presentation he talks about various organisations and governments who are committed to measuring quality of life. Watch out for his mention of Wikiprogress!

How to inspire and enable people to help build a happier society together



'Action for Happiness' is a new movement launched on the 12th of April by 3 great progress thinkers, Lord Layard, Geoff Mulgan and Anthony Seldon. Due to the overwhelming response, the website for Action for Happiness is currently down. See a selection of news items on the movement below and full coverage in the Action for Happiness - Media Review article. We'll post the link here as soon as the site is up! You can also stay up to day by following the for Happiness Twitter account


More and more politicians are adopting the infant discipline of happiness economics - but they may face painful questions

The world's first membership organisation dedicated to spreading happiness is being officially launched.

A new organization is dedicated to the principle that money can't buy happiness — but individual acts of kindness can.


The inaugural United States Peace Index

Today the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) will launch the first ever United States Peace Index (USPI) that will rank 50 states
according to their peacefulness. The index aims to identify the key drivers of peace by state and will analyse the economic benefits of peace. In a statement from the IEP, the USPI ‘finds that a reduction in violence and crime could equate to billions of dollars in saved revenue.’
As the world’s largest economy, America is the ideal candidate to kick-start the planned series of national peace indices by the IEP and highlight potential economic and social gains from increasing levels of peace.
The national peace indices will build on the existing 149 national perspectives in the Global Peace Index. The Global Peace Index (GPI), which was launched by the IEP in 2007, ranks 149 countries based on 23 indicators of peace. The United States currently ranks85th on the GPI, with neighbours Canada ranking 14th and Mexico 107th.

Hans Rosling and the magic washing machine

China to Measure Happiness

We have created a media review of a variety of news items related to China's move to measure happiness. Two of the key articles are selected below, to see all items in the news review go to China to Measure Happiness - Media Review


The government introduces the country’s new mantra.

The pursuit of happiness, runs one of the most consequential sentences ever penned, is an unalienable right. That Jeffersonian sentiment seems to have influenced even China’s normally strait-laced, rubber-stamp legislature, the National People’s Congress (NPC), which has just wrapped up its annual session. Increasing happiness, officials now insist, is more important than increasing GDP. A new five-year plan adopted at the meeting has been hailed as a blueprint for a “happy China”. The prime minister, Wen Jiabao, however, appeared downright miserable as he described the challenges he faces.



In a world of 7 billion people, who is most typical? National Geographic Special Report


See the 7 Billion focus on National Geographic.

There will soon be seven billion people on the planet. By 2045 global population is projected to reach nine billion. Can the planet take the strain?

Earths 7 billion are depicted by 7000 human figures each representing 1000 people.


UNICEF releases the State of the World's Children Report 2011

The latest Unicef state of the world's children report is out, with a special focus on adolescents. So, how do the world's teenagers compare? Children are unambiguously the focus of the millennium development goals (MDGs). But what happens when they grow up? This year, the United Nations Fund for Children (UNICEF) have dedicated their annual flagship report to the world's 1.2bn teenagers. "In the global effort to save children's lives, we hear too little about adolescence," says Anthony Lake, UNICEF's energetic new executive director. "Surely we do not want to save children in their first decade of life only to lose them in the second." The State of the World's Children 2011 produces a snapshot of what the world looks like for its billion-plus teenagers, 88 percent of which live in developing countries.
See Guardian article for more

See also

For In the Spotlight prior to 2011, see:

References

External links

Media Review

__NORICHEDITOR__

CP-left.gif   CP-home.gif CP-MR.gif CP-BR.gif CP-Spot.gif CP-Papers.gif CP-Apps.gif
 

In the News

Progress in the news · Community Portal ·
Progress in the news - February 2012
Progress in the news - January 2012 ·
Progress in the news - December 2011 ·
Progress in the news - November 2011 ·

Recent progress in the news

If proof were needed of the maxim that the road to hell is paved with good intentions, the economic crisis in Europe provides it.
Americans’ emotional health is at its highest level since an ongoing study started measuring it four years ago, according to a Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index.
The OECD is relaunching its Better Life Index today - and has given us the key data behind it
Australia is living up to its nickname of 'the lucky country,' with a new survey marking it as the happiest industrialized nation in the world based on criteria such as jobs, income and health.
By any measure – health, education, housing or income – Canadians are far better off than residents of the developing world.
Ericsson today announced its support for a new MillenniumVillage in Ghana which will bring connectivity to up to 30,000 people.
Having resources the world wants is one way to a better life – at least, as measured by the United Nations’ well-being index.
Nunavut ranks below Estonia and Cyprus when it comes to socio-economic well-being, according to a study by the Ottawa-based Centre for the Study of Living Standards.
Whenever a survey of the world's happiest country is released, European welfare states usually top the list.
April 2012 Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index(R) Shows Increases in Emotional Health, Healthy Behaviors, Access to Basic Necessities and Life Evaluation
Business leaders from India, Sub-Saharan Africa and the United States have joined forces to tackle a wide range of global health issues in the developing world and accelerate the translation of research into life-saving products.
United Nations senior officials today stressed the importance of establishing a new paradigm for growth that ensures social inclusiveness, job opportunities for all, and more accountability from the financial sector to tackle the ongoing global economic crisis.
The 2012 UN Human Development Report for Africa has asked African states to institute measures to lower people and communities' vulnerability to natural disasters, civil conflicts and seasonal or volatile changes in food prices and climate change.
Speech by Helen Clark, Administrator of UNDP on the occasion of the launch of the UNDP Africa Human Development Report 2012 "Towards a Food Secure Future"
In what may be another hit for the current state of economic affairs of the country, the recently released Gallup research at the Behaviour Economics Forum in the Capital shows that nearly 240 million people, or 31 per cent of Indians, are "suffering."
I've written about Richard Easterlin here before. He's a noted economist and professor at the University of Southern California who's often credited with pioneering "happiness" as a worthy subject for economists to study
Paul Ladd, an Advisor to the United Nations Development Programme, highlighted the fact that multiple definitions of the SDGs exist.
China should do more to control carbon emissions in its rapidly expanding cities, a World Bank report said Thursday.
African countries need more support from the private sector in order to meet the United Nations Millennium Development Goals by 2015, which include important development targets like poverty reduction, and improved health and education.
According to the new Gallup Financial Wellbeing Index, 31% of the respondents feel that they are suffering, and 56% are 'struggling'.
Gross domestic product has been the be-all and end-all in economics.
Inequality isn’t only plaguing America—the Arab Spring flowered because international capitalism is broken. In From Cairo to Wall Street: Voices from the Global Spring, edited by Anya Schiffrin and Eamon Kircher-Allen, Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz says the world is finally rising up and demanding a democracy where people, not dollars, matter—the best government that money can buy just isn’t good enough.
"What you measure is what you get,” said Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz. Soon Vermont may measure its economic well-being somewhat differently.
If a fairy godmother were to wave a magic wand to satisfy our every wish, what would we ask for? An end to poverty, disease, violence and environmental degradation?
Ethiopia bucks the trend that top performing Olympic countries are wealthier with higher literacy and life expectancy levels, research suggests.
United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon who is on an India trip Friday met Meira Kumar during which the Lok Sabha speaker asked him to involve developing countries in the consultation process with regard to the millennium development goals.
Aside from tiny Bhutan and their pursuit of Gross National Happiness, every country bases economic policy on the pursuit of endless GDP growth, and companies are right there with them. But common sense tells us that nothing can grow forever, and thus national and corporate-level goals alike have a sizeable blind spot.
A recent World Bank report has revealed that economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa remains strong and is poised for a lift-off after growing at 4.9 percent in 2011, just shy of the pre-crisis average of 5 percent.
When Kenya’s newly announced geothermal power generation project comes online, it will turn the East African country into an economic powerhouse in the region.
The post-2015 millennium development goals must focus on sustainability, equity and reaching the poorest of the poor
The charity's Scottish arm has used measures including health, transport, family life and employment to evaluate quality of life
This is the text of Shdow Treasurer Joe Hockey's speech to the Institute of economic affairs in London.
While many African countries have registered significant advances during the past decade, overall the continent will miss 2015 goals by a wide margin at the current rate.
New Philanthropy Capital has created a tool that helps charities prove that the work they do is worth funding
Bulgaria and Yemen lead the world in suffering
UNDP economic advisor Roberto Tibana says Luapula Province is not doing well and is least in human development compared to other provinces in the country.
The suffering index measures respondents' perceptions of where they stand on a ladder scale with steps numbered from 0 to 10, where "0" represents the worst possible life.
As one of the few students among the bevy of diplomats and world leaders attending the United Nation's high-level meeting on wellness and happiness last Monday, I wasn't sure how I or my fellow peers fit into the discussion.
Despite many successes in creating a more integrated and stable global economy, a new report by the United Nations Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability – Resilient People, Resilient Planet: A Future Worth Choosing – recognizes the current global order’s failure, even inability, to implement the drastic changes needed for true “sustainability.”
The Asian nation of Bhutan believes it has found a good way to gauge wellbeing.
Stronger yet was the correlation between development indicators like the Human Development Index and the literacy rate with litigation rates.
The 2010 Asia-Pacific Human Development Report estimates that if women's labour force participation rates were raised to 70 per cent.. Economists and development experts are meeting at the United Nations in New York to discuss whether improving happiness is just as important as increasing gross national product (GNP) for developing countries.
If happiness could be measured the way a country's economic performance is measured in terms of gross national product or gross domestic product, then Malaysia would be the world's 51st happiest country.
Despite many successes in creating a more integrated and stable global economy, a new report by the United Nations Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability – Resilient People, Resilient Planet: A Future Worth Choosing – recognizes the current global order’s failure, even inability, to implement the drastic changes needed for true “sustainability.”
What started in Bhutan is coming to a government near you
Bhutan, the tiny Himalayan nation which tops Asia in the United Nations' First World Happiness Report, convened the meeting seeking to develop a new economic model based on principles of happiness and well being.

As Ryback explains, the meeting was approved in a UN resolution last year recognizing that “the pursuit of happiness is a fundamental human goal” and “the gross domestic product [GDP] does not adequately reflect the happiness and well-being of peopl.
Today the United Nations will discuss happiness.
By Michael Astor AP AP Should happiness figure in a nation's bottom line?
The feelgood factor has not yet reached the leader of Bhutan, the country that brought the world the National Happiness Index. But the Himalayan kingdom's campaign to put gross national happiness alongside gross domestic product is starting to sway ...
Happiness research is now one of the hottest fields in development economics, thanks to Bhutan's Gross National Happiness Index (GNH), which replaces the traditional Gross National Product (GDP) as gauge of national progress.
The faster we cut down forests and haul in fish stocks to extinction, the more GDP grows.
On Monday at the UN, the Prime Minister of Bhutan is convening a summit titled Wellbeing and Happiness: Defining a New Economic Paradigm. The idea is to advance a movement to get the world's leaders to think differently about how they measure success.
With the anaemic levels of GDP growth in developed countries, focusing on other indicators like happiness might look like a not-so-subtle way of trying to change the music.
Next week Bhutan will host host a high level conference at the United Nations in New York with the hope of placing happiness, rather than growth, at the heart of the economy
The pressing need for a global "new deal" to foster sustainable development and reduce inequalities was the conclusion of the 2012 Global Human Development Forum, a new initiative by the United Nations, held in Istanbul from Mar. 22-23.
Two economists envision a scary -- and scarily realistic -- future where the working population expands slower and slower, and jobless recoveries are the only recoveries we know
Global Human Development Forum Adopts ‘Istanbul Declaration’ Urging Bold Action at UN ‘Rio+20’ Conference this June
Who are the happiest people? According to a new report from Gallup, it's those who regularly go to a place of worship, whether it be a church, mosque or synagogue.
The international community must “reset the global development agenda” and strengthen its commitment to sustainable development, a United Nations-backed conference in Istanbul heard today.
Quite a few of the 10 provincial regions that did most in improving residents' average income in 2011 are from China's relatively backward western regions, which included Guizhou, Yunnan and Chongqing, according to the latest 2011 Gross Domestic Product quality rankings recently published by the Beijing-based China Economy Research Institute, a think-tank of China Economic Weekly under People's Daily News Group.
Vice President John Dramani Mahama on Tuesday stated that the government could only achieve most of the Millennium Development Goals.
In its report Environmental Outlook to 2050, it projects existing socio-economic ... undermine the growth and human development of future generations.
And the financial turmoil has impacted personal health as well
Regardless of our attaining a seven per cent GDP growth rate in the ... something which cannot make anyone with the nation's well-being in mind, happy.
A group of independent United Nations experts today urged States to include universally agreed international human rights norms and standards, as well as accountability mechanisms, in the goals that will emerge from a UN sustainable development forum in June.
African negotiators to the forthcoming Rio+20 conference on sustainable development, to be held in June, gathered in New York last week for a training session on negotiation techniques. The African Development Bank (AfDB) supports six of the negotiators from its African member states.
'How are you? We must each pose the question a dozen times a day, but how often are we really interested in the reply?
It’s 40 years since the publication of The Limits to Growth. In Europe and in China, writes Patrick Schroeder, a new wave of thinkers and decision-makers are beginning to revisit its core message.
SAS, UN analyze social media to find leading, lagging indicators of surges in unemployment
Contrary to popular beliefs about grumpy old men and women, people grow happier as they get older, research shows.
One year ago, a major earthquake struck off Japan's northeastern coast, causing a devastating tsunami.
It’s been a good few days for Millennium Development Goals. Not one but two targets were reported as met last week, which means that we have reason to celebrate.
Japan's landscape was a surreal sight to behold one year ago: Flipped cars, ships on top of buildings, completely dismantled homes. As victims of the destruction walked through wreckage in disbelief, or paddled down flooded streets in boats, the rest of the world processed the imagery from afar.
A new index ranks the competitiveness of global cities
Ban calls for more global partnership to checkmate extreme poverty. UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Friday stressed that focused financing and partnerships for development have resulted in great strides in the global efforts to combat extreme poverty and facilitate social development, noting that the number of impoverished people is declining across the world.
It's a long time now since my first visit to Uluru, the stupendous sandstone formation in Australia's Red Center that European settlers called Ayers Rock, but which has now officially reverted to the name by which it was always known to the Pitjantjatjara Aboriginal people.
A team from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, or O.E.C.D., has just come out with a fascinating little study mapping the correlation between performance on the Program for International Student Assessment, or PISA, exam — which every two years tests math, science and reading comprehension skills of 15-year-olds in 65 countries — and the total earnings on natural resources as a percentage of G.D.P. for each participating country.
Money may not buy happiness - but it has helped make women in Brazil become the happiest, most optimistic women in the world, according to a study.
Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, offered a sobering outlook this week on Europe's debt crisis, predicting the euro in its current form was unlikely to survive.
Happiness is an elusive thing for many Americans, according to a Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index that found Hawaii to be the best off state in the country, and West Virginia, the worst, when it comes to achieving a happy lifestyle.
There was a Sputnik moment in the world of global education in December 2010.
People's personalities can change considerably over time, say scientists, suggesting that leopards really can change their spots.
Thailand’s gross domestic happiness index for February has dropped over the higher cost of living, Abac Poll Research Centre says.
A report commissioned by Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, from Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen, the Nobel laureate economists, was the inspiration for the Office for National Statistics’ work on measuring national well-being,
Counting one's blessings
People with children reported feeling their lives were more worthwhile than those without offspring
National survey reveals that those living in Northern Ireland are the most content
With elections on in many parts of India, much is being said about the importance of democracy and how it brings growth and prosperity.
A United Nations' report has revealed that life in the city is often tough for children.
The Gross Domestic Product per capita of Beijing residents reached 80,394 yuan, US$12,447, in 2011, closing the gap with more developed countries.
Mao Lianying makes 15,000 yuan a month pre-tax as a Beijing department store accounting manager, but doesn't consider herself a high wage earner.
Western states still boast the best wellbeing, Southern states the worst
In the report, EPHA highlights the growing body of evidence that GDP alone cannot measure all aspects of human development, does not account for social costs.
Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz suggested that Gross Domestic Product – the method with which we measure national wealth – is an inadequate measure and recommended new indicators to assess sustainability in ways that complement traditional measures of growth
Over the past five decades, the comparative charts of happiness vis-a-vis a country's per capita GDP show a staggering conclusion.
(Motley Fool 26.02.2012) In a withering 2009 Vanity Fair profile of the situation in Iceland, Michael Lewis described a bleak scene...
And which nation's people are happiest? It is easy to misunderstand my position on the grim report of the National Bureau of Statistics on the deteriorating standards of living in Nigeria. I must therefore state it clearly that there is indeed unjustified abject poverty in Nigeria.
If region's economic and social woes aren't competently dealt with, desired democratic transition in Arab world will fail, warns new report by UN Development Programme (UNDP)
Meghalaya will replicate Bhutan’s model of Gross National Happiness as an index of the state’s well- being, Chief Minister Mukul Sangma said.
Governments warned failing to account for externalities will make climate change harder to manage
The Asia-Pacific region has made big gains in reducing poverty and is moving fast towards other development goals, but still has high levels of hunger as well as child and maternal mortality, said a new report released here today.
One speaker at a Queenstown entrepreneur conference this week will be talking about how business needs to be a force for good.
Money makes the world go round. But as the euro debt crisis grinds on and anti-austerity protests gain momentum across the continent,
If GDP data are hopeless at sorting out what is important about a traffic jam, they are even less capable of measuring happiness.
Gross National Happiness or happiness interwoven with balanced economic development was a concept introduced by Bhutan's King in 1972, as an alternative to Gross Domestic Product, said Bhutan's National Assembly member Dupthob at the start of a four-day visit to Arunachal Pradesh as the leader of a five-member team.
Living in the midst of floods, wars and earthquakes, you wonder if the world is a happy place to live in. But it seems there are happy places throughout the world. Take a look.
The aspirational Indian argues that happiness is now within the reach of each one of us... provided we are not tight-fisted and give in to the urge to splurge
The United States National Medal of Arts and Humanities awarded Monday to Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen — the first non-American to be conferred the rare honour — speaks to the universalism of his contributions in economics and philosophy over the past five decades
As the number of senior citizens locked behind bars skyrockets, cash-strapped states are unable to foot the growing health care bills.
The typical full-time female worker still earns about 81 cents for every dollar that her male counterpart earns.
Authorities in south China's Guangdong province have released the region's first official happiness index report, with the city of Guangzhou topping the list, followed by Dongguan and Zhuhai, the New Express Daily reports.
Zurich has become the world’s most expensive city to live in, according to the latest Worldwide Cost of Living Survey from the Economist Intelligence Unit, our sister company.
Community participation will be the key to the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), Community Development, Mother and Child Health Minister Joseph Katema has said.
US president Barack Obama on Monday will award the National Medals of Arts and Humanities to Indian economist Amartya Sen who won his Nobel Prize for Economics in 1998 for his studies of the roots of poverty.
The announcement by President Ma Ying-jeou’s (馬英九) administration last week that it would create a national happiness index and make Taiwanese wealthier marks an important task for the Cabinet led by Premier Sean Chen (陳冲).
Ban Ki-moon warns Earth will run out of sustainable resources
With bated breath, the world’s markets recently waited for the announcement of the U.S. fourth-quarter gross domestic product growth rate – a potential bellwether for the global economy. It turned out to be 2.8 percent.
In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson called the pursuit of happiness an unalienable right.
The current environmental scenarios suggest that by 2050 human development index will have a considerable reduction, said Barbara Pesce-Monteiro, permanent representative in Cuba of the UN Program for Development.
Lowest underemployment rates were in North and South Dakota
The country will begin quantifying GNH by measuring what GDP leaves out, such as its natural wealth including human, social and culture ones like GDP does ...
Anja has been scrubbing floors and washing dishes for two euros an hour over the past six years. She is bewildered when she sees newspapers hailing Germany's "job miracle."
This house believes that society benefits when we share personal information online.
The happiness agenda is just a way of making huge social problems seem personal.
In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson called the pursuit of happiness an unalienable right. This was a radical idea. For most of history, most people didn’t think much about pursuing happiness. They were too busy just trying to survive.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2012/02/08/what-really-makes-people-happy/#ixzz1ls7N9Ilk The United Nations' eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) further expand the concept of human development
For disengaged workers, long commutes linked to higher stress levels.
China will carry out a comprehensive survey of urban and rural salaries that may help better gauge its income gap, the China Daily reported today, citing Xie Hongguang, a deputy head of the National Bureau of Statistics.
Taiwan will establish an index of well-being and release the results as early as next year, according to the Cabinet-level Directorate-General of Budget, Accounting and Statistics Feb 6.
Statistical data on economic and social development suggests that humanity has made considerable progress in these areas over the last 50 years.
Connie Hedegaard says GDP model of growth causes overconsumption, drives up commodity prices and ignores the environment.
The miracle of the Chinese economy is based on the premise that speed over rides and dilutes everything else. However, it's now the time now for us to step back from the frenetic pace of "Beijing Time" and slow down, for the sake of both our dignity and happiness.
To the newly arrived or recently returned, the reality of contemporary economic Australia is startling. So is the mythology.
Connie Hedegaard says GDP model of growth causes overconsumption, drives up commodity prices and ignores the environment.
India's excellent economic growth has had little impact on its social indicators, and India is likely to miss achieving the Millennium Development Goals in respect of poverty reduction, health, nutrition, sanitation and gender.
A report by a top-level political panel has endorsed calls for greater integration of science into all levels of policymaking on sustainable development.
Prof. Sachs began his address by emphasizing the role that technology and technological change can play in sustainable development and said it is the need of the hour to overcome deep structural challenges that limit diffusion of technology for sustainable development. He presented the challenges and the need for information revolution for sustainable development.
Haitians rate their lives better now than they did before the earthquake ravaged their country two years ago.
Migrants seeking permission to enter Britain must prove they will ‘add to the quality of life’ and not become ‘dependent’ on state support, a minister said today.
As election season follows, people frequent a talk of “welfare” and “free”. Lately, once hotly debated issue “free school meals“ finally elected a new Seoul major. And the newly elected leader of the Democratic Party Han Myeong-sook expressed her strong will to extend social welfare by taking over the political spirit of former president Roh Moo-hyun’s era.
Poverty eradication, youth unemployment and socially inclusive policies will be the main focus of the 50th session of the United Nations Commission for Social Development, which kicked off today at UN Headquarters in New York.
Sustainable development means achieving economic growth that is widely shared and that protects the earth’s vital resources.
If Canada is to morph into a knowledge-based economy, its citizens need better access to reliable, unbiased information.
When it comes to progress in Human Development Index, Assam has done far better in the last decade than most major states in India, achieving 32.1 per cent progress for the period 1999-2008, as reported in India Human Development Report 2011.
The Republic should devise its own index that measures the quality of life, as many of such indices available are culturally specific and may not adequately capture the happiness and well-being of Singaporeans, according to Professor Lily Kong, a vice-president at the National University of Singapore.
The outline of a sustainable development system to empower villagers.
Residents of Northern Ireland have higher overall wellbeing than those in England, Scotland, or Wales, according to Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index data from 2011. Wales had the lowest overall wellbeing score.
A high-profile panel of the United Nation Secretary General (UNSG) on Global Sustainability has recommended that the world adopt sustainable development targets. The move has been opposed by India and several other developing countries as creating a backdoor for caps on emissions and green targets, while breaching the firewall between developing and rich countries that is enshrined in the Rio declaration and the UN convention on climate change.
A high-level United Nations panel on global sustainability formed by Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon, in its final report said "the world is still not on the path of sustainable development," even though real progress has been made on some issues.
Seoul’s population has seen a landmark reversal with the flow of residents leaving the city exceeding the influx of new citizens for the first time in 40 years. Experts are predicting that a slow exodus from the capital region may continue.
'Genuine Progress Indicator' takes more factors into account than GDP
UN panel calls for sustainable development indicators that factor in poverty, inequality, science and gender equality
The stage is set for a different kind of evolution, so surrender, says guest editor Deepak Chopra
The world is running out of time to make sure there is enough food, water and energy to meet the needs of a rapidly growing population and to avoid sending up to 3 billion people into poverty, a U.N. report warned on Monday.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon today urged African countries to entrench civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights to boost stability and development in the continent.
Qatar’s third National Human Development Report, addressing key issues affecting Qatari youth, was launched on Thursday by the General Secretariat for Development Planning.
African countries are making “slow and generally insufficient” progress toward meeting the United Nations Millennium Development goals.
GDP measures economic growth, but is it an accurate measure of progress?
The Greek philosopher Diogenes is said to have lived in a tub. But far from being dismissed as a crank, he was the only thinker whom Alexander the Great went to see – the others had to come to him.
In his response to the Institute of Economic Affairs' report on wellbeing and the role of government, Dr Mark Williamson, director of Action for Happiness, said it was clear that some policy decisions that were good for growth were often bad for wellbeing.
There used to be a ladder to success. It was the college→good job→marriage→house→family→cushy retirement. Sure, not everyone made it, there were a few broken rungs near the bottom but that was the guiding light to the good life and enough people made it that it seemed within reach
The presenter of Desert Island Discs has caused a stir by saying she doesn’t want her children to be happy.
Once-airy talk of replacing GDP with metrics of happiness is gaining credibility in important circles
New Data Reveals Improvements in Americans' Emotional Health and Life Evaluation
Aims of national human development reports are to achieve national consensus on the fundamentals of the issue and to increase transparency indicators in the country, said Kuwait's minister of commerce and industry on Monday.
The citizenry must have gotten accustomed to this kind of sad news. In fact, it is no longer news that Nigeria is consistently at the bottom of the rung among the poor countries of the world.
As economic contagion continues in Europe, and with the future of the euro imperiled, Newsweek asked eight economists to describe the origin of the problem facing the single currency and what would happen if the euro were abolished.
Statistics does not seem to feature very much in Africa’s socio-economic development agenda, despite its importance and the fact that the use of good quality data has the ability to impact on development outcomes.
It may seem intuitive that states that invest more in public services are better places for children to grow up, but the Foundation for Child Development now has the numbers to prove it. The foundation is out with a new study that confirms the “strong relationship” between higher state taxes and children’s health.
A new report commissioned by the Marin Community Foundation illustrates the stark contrasts in health, life expectancy, education and recreation between Marin's wealthiest residents and those living in the county's low-income and minority neighborhoods.
In the precarious and uneven recovery from the worst global financial and economic crisis in decades, the expanding role of governments in combating it has become increasingly controversial from the perspective of economic freedom.
It's not the Government's business to make us happy - it should be focusing on getting the country working, writes Rachel Salvidge.
Collecting data on individual students over time may give educators the insight they need to fix America's schools.
The East End school on David Street, just off the Gallowgate, punches well above its weight in terms of achievement in education, singing and parental involvement, despite the fact that its pupils often come with the “baggage” of a chaotic upbringing.
US ambassador to Ethiopia Donald E. Booth said ongoing development efforts of Ethiopia would enable the country to attain the Millennium Development Goals.
What we really need, as Nobel Prize-winning economists Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz point out in recent columns, is to get over the current obsession with debt reduction and instead focus on investing in our material and human infrastructure.
Tens of thousands of lives could have been spared if agencies and governments had heeded the warnings, a report says
As the International Year of Sustainable Energy for All kicked off today, United Nations officials called on governments, the private sector and civil society to help expand energy access, improve efficiency and increase the use of renewables.
More people lived in China's cities than in the countryside last year for the first time in history, a milestone that also points to labour supply strains in the world's No. 2 economy that could redraw the global manufacturing landscape.
The Federal Government intends to spend N10billion training teachers under the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) project this year, according to estimates from the Ministry of Education sub-budget.
Modern macroeconomics often seems to treat rapid and stable economic growth as the be-all and end-all of policy. That message is echoed in political debates, central-bank boardrooms, and front-page headlines. But does it really make sense to take growth as the main social objective in perpetuity, as economics textbooks implicitly assume?
People in Britain are enduring what is meant to be the most miserable day of the year.
If your policy is one of austerity it is advisable to use something other than economic growth as a measure of your success
Yes, money can buy you happiness, says a study, finally putting an end to the age-old debate.
When it comes to happiness, myths abound. For centuries we have hotly debated what makes a good life, where satisfaction ultimately comes from and fundamentally how we can be happy.
Tanzanians are least satisfied with their lives in the region, a global report says.
Ghana is one of Africa's great successes – a stable and thriving country that is testament to the impact of aid. As pressure on these budgets grows, Observer editor John Mulholland travels to the country to assess its progress
Tanzanians are concurrently the happiest but least optimistic people in East Africa.
What we really need, as Nobel Prize-winning economists Paul Krugman and Joseph Stiglitz point out in recent columns, is to get over the current obsession with debt reduction and instead focus on investing in our material and human infrastructure.
Statistics that measure how content we all are might not be as silly as they sound, argues sociologist William Davies
On Saturday 9 July 2011 South Sudan celebrated its independence day. How did the current nation states emerge from colonisation?
All-out efforts are required to achieve the objective of Millennium Development Goals till 2015.
Life ratings improved in November and December compared with July to October
There's been a bit of froth and bubble about the term social inclusion this summer.
The Children's Society report that one in 11 kids are not happy isn't surprising. But treating their suffering separately is pointless
Homicide, other violent crimes, incarceration, policing, and guns are costing this country hundreds of billions of dollars, and millions of jobs, every year. According to conservative estimates by the Institute for Economics and Peace, if the United States were on par with Canada on all five of those fronts, it could save $361 billion a year and add 2.7 million jobs. Given America's high debt and unemployment, it could certainly benefit from both. David Cameron a while ago took to riffing about the state of our national happiness, telling us - co-incidentally enough just as the economy was going down the Swanney - that it was time 'we admitted that there's more to life than money, and it's time we focused not just on GDP but on GWB – general wellbeing'.
India's move to recognise the right to food as a basic human right would lead to the implementation of the world's largest social protection programme against hunger and will set an example for the world to follow, said Prof Joseph E. Stiglitz of Columbia University and Nobel Laureate.
Fifty-five percent of upper-income Americans say their standard of living is "getting better"
Noted economist Joseph Stiglitz on Wednesday praised the Indian economy’s performance, saying the country had been doing a good job when institutions in the US and several other countries faltered. India is doing a good job and has been pursuing a balanced and cautious policy, he said.
Survey of 30,000 children aged eight to 16 pinpoints family relationships and 'materialistic traps' behind low well-being
To help measure the general well-being of Filipinos, Sen. Loren Legarda filed Senate Resolution 672, urging the National Economic and Development Authority to develop new indicators that will reflect the happiness and well-being of Filipinos.
On Wednesday, a Washington-based group that seeks to reduce global threats from nuclear weapons released a first-ever scorecard on the security of nuclear materials worldwide, ranking 32 countries on criteria such as their commitments to global norms, known security measures and other factors including corruption and government instability.
An increasing number of African countries are beginning to step away from aid dependency, as the domestic private sector becomes the engine of growth across much of Africa.
A senator wants the government to come up with new growth indicators that would measure Filipinos’ “gross happiness.”
The head of the United Nations agency tasked with promoting education today underscored the role that information and communications technologies can play in ensuring quality education and equal opportunities to learning even in countries that lag behind because of limited resources.
No fewer than 1,000 women and girls die daily in Nigeria
As the World Bank goes from open data to open knowledge, a free software program created by Bank researchers is offering staff and policy makers around the world a helping hand in evidence-based decision making.
A survey conducted in 30 countries by Philips shows that when asked to assess their wellbeing, people mainly rely on health, standard of living and relations with family and friends.
More Iraqis experiencing negative emotions daily, as U.S. withdraws forces
That a 200,000 lift in US payrolls failed to enthuse the market on Friday night should give us a feel for what will drive action in the near-term.
The World Bank has said that it will be difficult for Pakistan to meet the Millennium Development Goals targets on health and education by 2015.
A greener, more equitable and wellbeing-orientated form of globalisation could be on the horizon says Dax Lovegrove
Historically, forecasts accompany the new year the way happiness accompanies a couple on their wedding day.
A roundup of economic news from around the Web.
One great way to start a bar fight during an American Economic Association conference is to claim that the U.S. economy is preferable to Europe’s.
A roundup of economic news from around the Web.
A statistical analysis of attitudes in the US reveals the main determinants of happiness but also suggests that interpreting the data is fraught with danger
If the crowning achievement of 20th-century economics was constructing a national income statement, the crowning achievement of 21st-century economics should be a national balance sheet
Throughout 2011, news media have charted the fractional rises in gross domestic product growth with the fevered intensity of gamblers clutching at their last betting slip.
Modern macroeconomics often seems to treat rapid and stable economic growth as the be-all and end-all of policy.
Modern macroeconomics often seems to treat rapid and stable economic growth as the be-all and end-all of policy.
UNDP has made significant criteria to evaluate how happy the masses are in different corners of the world.
Last week Forbes Magazine, in its list of the happiest and saddest countries in the world, disclosed that we are one of three saddest nations in the world.
Expectations, cultural perspectives define happiness, pollster says
The key message from a Cambridge University study about a countrys happiness is that the UK government, like many around the world, now recognises that economic measures such as GDP do not provide adequate information about a societys progress.
The key message from a Cambridge University study about a country's happiness is that the UK government, like many around the world, now recognises that economic measures such as GDP do not provide adequate information about a society's progress.
If you work in the Government, it is very easy to fall into the trap of thinking in terms of numbers and forget that behind every statistic there is a human story.
A new economic order is taking shape before our eyes, and it is one that includes accelerated convergence between the old Western powers and the emerging world’s major new players.
The United Nations human rights chief today called on Bahraini authorities to address the “deepening mistrust” between the Government and civil society, including by releasing those detained for participating in peaceful protests.
The internationally stated goal of improving access to safe drinking water across the globe is likely to be achieved well ahead of the 2015 deadline, but large numbers of people in the world's least developed regions will still not benefit, according to a U.N. report released Wednesday
“Happiness,” said Aristotle, “depends upon ourselves.”
Bhutan's Prime Minister Jigmi Y. Thinley Tuesday said that happiness is the purpose and ultimate desire of every human being and for real sustainable growth, the needs of body and mind have to be attended to equally.
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today lavished praises on his Bhutanese counterpart Jigmi Y Thinley saying he gave "practical meaning" to the Gross National Happiness concept of the Kingdom in the functioning of his government and wanted India to learn from it.
Some economists have questioned the National Economic and Development Authority’s forecast that the Philippines has a “good chance” of meeting its 4.5 to 5.5 percent economic growth target for 2011 and its 5 to 6 percent aim for 2012.
It seems that the current political developments which are capricious have overshadowed the findings of the recently released UNDP report on the Human Development Index
Polaris, or the North Star, is a reliable guide to measure one’s latitude in the northern hemisphere.
But with a billion extremely poor people on Earth, funding must only go to effective organizations
With the EU battling against failing economies and a faltering single currency, world leaders are embroiled in a worrying and traumatic financial crisis this winter
One of the initial discussion points, and personal objectives, was to place some kind of parametres on the notion of open innovation.
In 2011, social media gave legs to the 'Occupy' movement and mass protests in the Middle East.
The Australian Bureau of Statistics has been measuring social progress since 2002, writes Imogen Wall, project leader of the Bureau's Measures of Australia's Progress 2.0 consultation process.
Who are the world's biggest employers?
With a final score of 5-4, UNDP won the 2011 Match Against Poverty against HSV in Hamburg, Germany, on 13 December, 2011 before more than 24,000 spectators. The match was broadcast live in more than 25 countries.
Dr Grace Bediako, Government Statistician, has said an African Gender Statistic Group will soon be launched to help with the mainstreaming of gender into national and international statistics programmes.
A Mongolian environment science professor notes that per capita carbon emissions are a simple, available and quantifiable indicator, which is seen to be positively and strongly correlated with income and not at all with health and education
The Rule of Law and Anti-Corruption Centre was launched in Qatar yesterday with a call by the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to fight corruption and promote human rights to achieve all the Millennium Development Goals.
With prices of foods skyrocketing, more hard times await Nigerian children as statistics available have shown that two out of every five Nigerian children are chronically malnourished.
Despite the recent spate of murders, robberies, attacks on women and petty thefts here, Mumbai in general perception remains among the safest cities in the country
After a visit from the young King of Bhutan and his beautiful new pride, Japan got “Gross National Happiness” fever, it seems, and so has Taiwan.
New numbers are to the press as shiny bottle caps are to magpies.
The figures for the growth in gross domestic product were out again this week, but for some time I have been concerned about our national fixation on GDP.
video
The Herald - Lateral Economics Index of Australia's Well-being adjusts GDP to take into account the changes in value of the nation's stock of physical, environmental and human capital. It also adjusts for changes in health, inequality and job satisfaction to provide a better measure of national wellbeing than traditional economic measures.
Bo Shide spends all day and many nights on the internet. But he is not the average Chinese “netizen”.
What is happiness? Charles Schulz, the creator of Peanuts, wrote, “Happiness is a warm puppy.” John Lennon had a different take: “Happiness is a warm gun.”
Efforts needed to transform national achievements into individual happiness
Two United Nations officials called today for developed countries to fulfil their aid pledges for developing countries, stressing that without aid, they run the risk of falling behind as the global economic crisis spreads to their nations.
The Cabinet Office unveiled on Monday a set of indicators designed to measure public happiness to complement government economic statistics.
Announced at the opening of an Asia-Pacific forum on well-being held in Tokyo, the statistics are designed to gauge happiness based on three major factors — socioeconomic conditions, physical and mental health, and relationships.
Some breathed a sigh of relief last month when Occupy movement protests against economic inequality across the continent were evicted – be it by fire code and injunction, as in Vancouver, or police spies and massive tactical team raids as in parts of the U.S.
As a fast-developing neighboring country to the south, Taiwan is also considering conducting a su
A new report finds that the gap between the rich and the poor just keeps getting wider in Canada.
India has become "less equal over time" and earnings inequality in the country has increased significantly since the early 1990s, Paris-based think tank OECD said today.
Researchers, advocates, development partners, business people and policymakers gathered this weekend for Agriculture and Rural Development Day 3 and Forest Day 5.
'The richest countries caused the problem, but it is the world's poorest who are suffering from the effects.'
Transparency International defines corruption as the abuse of entrusted power for private gain
Women have made huge progress in the workplace, says Barbara Beck, Special reports editor of The Economist, and the author of our special report on the subject.
Video - The filmmaker Matt Wolf and the writer Jon Savage reflect on the history of youth in times of crisis.
The gap between rich and poor in OECD countries has reached its highest level for over over 30 years, and governments must act quickly to tackle inequality, according to a new OECD report.
Are First Nations reserves in trouble? The recent coverage of northern Ontario's Attawapiskat reserve and its squalid conditions suggest the answer is yes. So, too, Ottawa's decision to put Attawapiskat band finances under third-party control.
A recent report says many countries in Africa are not on track to meet adequate sanitation and clean water standards pledged for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

After £2million and several months, an official inquiry to discover whether we are happy has concluded that most of us are.
We're in the grip of an economic disaster, with people in fear for their jobs and financial security - but a new survey claims we are still a happy bunch.
The first results of the PM's happiness survey find Britons feel just fine – or so they say
Women and pensioners are the happiest people in Britain, new figures from the Office for National Statistics suggest.
About three-quarters of people in the UK are satisfied with life, according to a study to measure well-being by the Office for National Statistics.
The 1930s brought poverty but also better health – partly because inequality declined. Today's situation is rather different
China and India have agreed to join a global partnership on aid effectiveness but on vague terms that cast doubt on their willingness to stick by principles set by traditional donors.

Community notice board

The community notice board is a place for the community to interact. Feel free to post questions and comments here.

A new OpenSource project is trying a strategy to prevent researcher bias arising from the weighting of indicators for composite indices (alias 'mashup indices'). It is called Yourtopia and would be very grateful for your critiques, suggestions and participation.

ESDS International has made the World Bank World Development Indicators (DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5257/wb/wdi/2011-10) available as Resource Description Framework (RDF) flat files. RDF is one of the key ingredients of Linked Data providing a generic graph-based data model for describing things, including their relationships with other things. This Linked Data is freely available and we'd be interested to hear from anyone who has/intends to make use of this resource - see http://www.esds.ac.uk/international/news/news.asp#17jan12.

Archive

For blog posts on progress prior to 2011, see:

Related Categories

Article Information
Navigation
Toolbox
Print/export