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Since we stopped measuring success through military victories, money (and GDP in particular) has been the most common economic measure of a country’s success. A 2009 study by economists Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, and Jean-Paul Fitoussi examined alternatives to GDP and caused a seismic shift in attitudes.
In 2016, Arthur Grimes and colleagues finished up his “Testing the validity and robustness of national wellbeing and sustainability measures” project, generously funded by a Marsden Grant. An overview of this research is attached here.
The research addresses a fundamental question: "Are a country's policies and actions sustainably increasing its wellbeing?" Social scientists and ecologists have developed many indicators of national wellbeing and sustainability. Dr Grimes’s research is an overarching study that tests the adequacy and robustness of these aggregate measures for answering the fundamental question.
Key findings of the programme include:
Marsden Fund of the Royal Society of New Zealand
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