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Why governments should prioritize well-being

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    Just over a mile away from here
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    in Edinburgh's old town
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    is Panmure House.
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    Panmure House
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    was the home of the world-renowned
    Scottish economist Adam Smith.
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    In his important work
    "The Wealth of Nations,"
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    Adam Smith argued,
    amongst many other things,
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    that the measurement of a country's wealth
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    was not just its gold and silver reserves.
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    It was the totality of the country's
    production and commerce.
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    I guess it was one of the earliest
    descriptions of what we now know today
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    as Gross Domestic Product, GDP.
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    Now, in the years since, of course,
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    that measurement
    of production and commerce,
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    GDP, has become ever more important,
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    to the point that today,
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    and I don't believe that this
    is what Adam Smith would have intended,
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    that it is often seen as
    the most important measurement
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    of a country's overall success.
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    And my argument today
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    is that it is time for that to change.
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    You know, what we choose to measure
    as a country matters.
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    It really matters, because
    it drives political focus,
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    it drives at public activity,
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    and against that context,
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    I think the limitations of GDP
    as a measurement of a country's success
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    is all too obvious.
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    You know, GDP measures
    the output of all of our work,
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    but it says nothing about
    the nature of that work,
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    about whether that work
    is worthwhile or fulfilling.
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    It puts a value, for example,
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    on illegal drug consumption,
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    but not on unpaid care.
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    It values activity in the short term
    that boosts the economy
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    even if that activity is hugely damaging
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    to the sustainability of our planet
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    in the longer term.
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    And when we reflect on the past decade
    of political and economic upheaval,
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    of growing inequalities,
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    and when we look ahead to the challenges
    of the climate emergency,
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    increasing automation,
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    an aging population,
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    then I think the argument for the case
    for a much broader definition
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    of what it means to be successful
    as a country, as a society,
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    is compelling, and increasingly so.
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    And that is why Scotland in 2018
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    took the lead, took the initiative
    in establishing a new network
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    called the Wellbeing Economy
    Governments group,
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    bringing together as founding members
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    the countries of Scotland, Iceland,
    and New Zealand for obvious reasons.
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    We're sometimes called the SIN countries,
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    although our focus is very much
    on the common good.
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    And the purpose of this group
    is to challenge that focus
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    on the narrow measurement of GDP,
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    to say that, yes, economic growth matters.
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    It is important.
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    But it is not all that is important.
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    And growth in GDP should not be pursued
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    at any or all cost.
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    In fact, the argument of that group
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    is that the goal, the objective
    of economic policy
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    should be collective wellbeing:
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    how happy and healthy a population is,
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    not just how wealthy a population is.
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    And I will touch on the policy
    implications of that in a moment,
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    but I think particularly
    in the world we live in today
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    it has a deeper resonance.
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    You know, when we focus on wellbeing,
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    we start a conversation
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    that provokes profound
    and fundamental questions.
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    What really matters to us in our lives?
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    What do we value in
    the communities we live in?
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    What kind of country,
    what kind of society,
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    do we really want to be?
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    And when we engage people
    in those questions,
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    in finding the answers to those questions,
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    then I believe that we have
    a much better chance
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    of addressing the alienation
    and disaffection from politics
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    that is so prevalent in so many countries
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    across the developed world today.
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    In policy terms, this journey
    for Scotland started back in 2007
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    when we published what we call
    our National Performance Framework,
Title:
Why governments should prioritize well-being
Speaker:
Nicola Sturgeon
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:00

English subtitles

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