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Inside the Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators
We help you peek into the minds of a wide range
of experts on trends in the US economy, society, and environment.
We hope you see how statistics, which always lag the real world,
have fallen further behind as global change has accelerated. You
will find it easier to interpret the new politics of statistics
and the proliferating debates about indicators and indexes of our
national wealth, progress, health, and well-being. You can join
the debates about whether the Consumer Price Index (CPI) overstates
inflation (by up to 1.5 percent as the Boskin Commission reported)
or if the core CPI is understated (because it omits energy, food, and
assets such as houses). Our technical manual provides a statistical
bedrock assessment of a wide range of key factors affecting the
overall quality of our lives and our children's future. We have
been delighted that so many copies have been ordered by statistical and
government agencies in other countries and in the USA
by local officials and politicians to use as a "recipe book"
to construct local quality-of-life indicators for towns and states
across one country. We have done the "intellectual ditch-digging,"
and we invite you to use our model, adapt or expand it for your
unique community needs. Keep contacting us with your thoughts and
suggestions.
All the world's industrializing societies
are undergoing similar changes and restructuring, as they move from
the earlier to the later stages of the Industrial Revolution. Part
of this great transition is toward information-based economies.
Here knowledge, intellectual capital, and the more intangible human
and social assets replace manual labor and some of the tangible
capital earlier economic textbooks called the "factors of production."
This transition is often accompanied by a deeper knowledge of natural
processes and ecological assets and the services nature provides.
We slowly shift to recycling our industrial materials in closed-loop
production, waste-reduction, re-manufacturing, and re-use. An industrial
design revolution is quietly under way. A member of our Advisory
Board, architect William McDonough is a leader in this design revolution,
currently advising Mayor Richard Daley in his plans to make Chicago
the "greenest" city in the USA. I am honored to be an
advisor to Mr. McDonough in this initiative. This industrial design
revolution is driven by the need to make human societies
ecologically sustainable, which in turn will require greater equity -- closing
the gap between rich and poor, between and within countries. Such a new
agenda for humanity was endorsed by the world's leaders at the United Nations
in 2000 as the Millenium Development Goals. But all societies still
have a long way to go. The Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life
Indicators help us keep track of US performance in all 12 areas
to gauge improvement towards our goals.
How was it that macro-economic statistics fell
so far behind in mapping these fundamental shifts? As I have pointed
out for 20 years, a large part of the problem is that conventional
economics and accounting considered air, water and nature's purifying
cycles to be "free" goods. Only recently have textbooks
begun to embrace "full-cost" prices, which account for
all the social and environmental costs of production. Only in the
past decade have we seen the rise of environmental and ecological
economics, full-cost accounting, and life cycle costing for investment
purposes. All this, together with the rise of social and environmental
auditing - accounting for "intangibles" and intellectual
property, the ongoing debate about how to measure productivity -
and the many attempts to overhaul GNP and GDP represent an ongoing
revolution in accounting and statistics. For example, better measures
of ecological and biodiversity assets and the services they provide
can help save rainforests, watersheds, wilderness and endangered
species. Such services have been estimated at over $30 trillion
annually. Scientists are still studying the complex ways that planetary
systems, the Earth's atmosphere and oceans interact with all species
to keep the climate stable and physical conditions hospitable to
human life. The Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems, published
by UNESCO (Paris, 2002) can be accessed at www.eolss.com. Leaders at the
G-8 Summit, July, 2005, recognized the need for action to address
global warming
On the foundations of conceptual innovators, a
host of efforts to redefine human development, wealth and progress
emerged in the 1980s and 1990s. David Morris of the Institute for
Local Self-Reliance produced the Physical Quality of Life Index
(PQLI) for the Overseas Development Council; Herman Daly and John
Cobb created the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) with
Clifford Cobb in 1989. These indices deduct from GNP many "defensive"
environmental and social costs, arriving at a significantly lower
"net GNP." They have been adapted widely in Europe, Australia,
and the United States as the Genuine Progress Index (GPI), published
by Redefining Progress, whose former director, Mathis Wackernagel,
who serves on our Advisory Board, was one of the creators of the
Ecological Footprint Analysis(Wackernagel
1995). Other approaches include the Fordham University Index of
Social Health mentioned earlier. In 1995, the World Bank released
an innovative Wealth Index, which re-categorized the wealth of nations
as comprising 20 percent environmental assets, 20 percent human-built
capital (factories and other financial assets) and a full 60 percent
as human capital and social capital. Slowly, such broader views
of capital assets engender broader views of investment, which include
those to improve health and education.
The Clinton Administration attempted to "green"
the GDP by means of an Integrated Environmental and Economic Satellite
Account (IEESA) developed by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
of the Department of Commerce in 1994. The Congress directed the
BEA to halt this work and charged the National Research Council
to review the entire issue. In late 1999, the Council issued its
report, Nature's Numbers (National Research Council 1999),
urging that the BEA be funded to re-start this effort. All this
caused a major change in the economics profession. Many of its best
minds embraced pieces of the new thinking, including Joseph Stiglitz,
formerly the World Bank's chief economist and recent recipient of
the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economics (in memory of Alfred Nobel),
former Harvard economist Jeffrey Sachs,
now advising the World Health Organization and President of Columbia
University's Earth Institute, and Paul Krugman, winner of the John
Bates Clark Medal, who teaches at Princeton University. The International
Society for Ecological Economics (ISEE) and the Association for
Evolutionary Economics (AFEE), both of which include me as a member,
are in the forefront of reconceptualizing conventional economics.
Perhaps the most influential, widely used and quoted
new formula is the United Nations Human Development Index (HDI),
produced by the UN Development Programme every year since 1990.
The HDI began by weighting per capita income (in terms of Purchasing
Power Parity which corrects for fluctuating values of different
currencies), education, and life expectancy to produce a rank for
every one of the 190 member countries of the United Nations. The
HDI updates and enhances its methodologies regularly, to include
military vs. civilian budget ratios, environmental factors, poverty
gaps, gender, and human rights data. The HDI has become a world
benchmark on government performance and has given rise to some 50
national HDI versions. The 2002 HDI focused on Deepening Democracy
in a Fragmented World (see www.undp.org) and the 2003 HDI focused
on the Millennium Development Goals, the Compact, which commits
the member states of the United Nations to cut poverty and increase
funding for health and education, as discussed in Section II of
the Update. The 2004 version's theme was migration, an important,
largely unanticipated consequence of the globalization of finance
markets and technology (see the update section
"The Global Boom in Indicators")
The deeper methodological debate over new measures
of wealth, progress, and human development has concerned the extent
to which money coefficients and macroeconomic models can capture
broad new areas of concern: human rights, health, education, environmental,
and overall quality of life. Many things humans hold most dear cannot
be measured in money terms. These debates characterized the ICONS
conference in Brasil, November 2003, discussed in the Indicators:
Past, Present, and Future section of this Update. Conventional methods currently
weight all data from different economic sectors into one index.
Defensive expenditures, such as cleaning of pollution, costs of
accidents or insulating houses near airports from aircraft noise,
are all added to GDP as more production - mixing in these "bads"
with the goods. Many believe, as we do with the Calvert-Henderson
Quality of Life Indicators, that aggregating all these "apples
and oranges" into one index is inappropriate and often confusing.
Another issue concerns the use of "satellite accounts"
for such environmental and social data. This designation gives an
impression of lesser value for such important data.
Quality-of-life indicators should not rely too
much on subjective opinion surveys and focus groups exploring personal
satisfaction or happiness. Even scientists poorly understand threats
to quality of life in many areas, and often the public is ill informed
or misinformed about toxic substances, climate change, budget priorities,
human rights and many other factors affecting personal satisfaction
and quality of life. We further believe that the diverse areas of
quality of life covered in the Calvert-Henderson approach deserve
their own metrics, specifically metrics that are most appropriate
within the diverse disciplines that study such fields. For example,
money coefficients cannot quantify human rights, air and water quality,
recreational satisfaction, education, health, public safety, or
national security. Money measures and percentages of national budgets
can give clues about quality of life but are often simply input
data. Composite indices do not measure outcomes or results.
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