(Applause)
Give me 30 seconds,
And I can give you a list of
30 terrifying challenges
facing humanity and the planet
at this point in history.
And we wouldn't sleep tonight.
There are so many of them,
and they seem so frightening
It's not really surprising
that many of us are feeling
a little bit disheartened,
and a little bit anxious at the moment.
But the way I see it -
There are really only two things
stopping the world working at the moment
The first one is the fact that
the countries don't collaborate enough.
We know the solutions
to most of those challenges.
But we don't implement them
because we don't work together.
And the second thing that's
stopping the world working properly
is the fact that every single
one of those challenges
has been caused by the behaviour
of human beings.
And if we can change that
we can change everything.
Now, those sound like
very big tasks and they are.
But I'm optimistic.
For the last 10 years, I've been working
on projects and plans and policies.
to try and attack those two barriers
to making the world work better.
Some of them I tried to encourage
countries to implement.
But the coolest ones, I keep
and I try to do them myself.
So I'd like to tell you about two of those
in the few minutes that I've got today.
The first one is more of an update.
It's a project called The Good Country
Index which I launched back in 2014.
I haven't spoken about it for a while, but
it's been through 4 different editions.
And I thought it would be good
to give an update.
So The Good Country Index is an attempt
to measure what every country on earth
gives to the rest of the world
outside of its own borders,
a kind of balance sheet
for the world if you like.
A lot of people when I
originally launched it
said not another country index. Surely
there're enough of those around already.
But the interesting thing is that
almost all of the others look inwards.
They treat countries
as if they were little islands
inhabiting their own private oceans.
But surely that doesn't really make sense.
Because everything everybody does
has an impact on all of us, always.
If one country pollutes the air or water,
that's our air and our water.
If they go to war,
drags other countries in
and the refugees pour out.
There's really nothing you can do any more
that only impacts the domestic population.
So what The Good Country Index
attempts to do
is to make a start towards
helping people to understand
that this is an interconnected system,
by measuring what each country
contributes to the rest of the world.
Now, it's not my opinion which countries
rank higher and which ones rank lower.
It's formed from a set of 35
large databases,
which mostly come from the UN system.
And what they do is they measure
the positive and negative effects
that the countries have.
It's always been a tiny bit controversial.
But that's kind of good,
because it helps to start
a new kind of argument.
In fact, it works really well.
Within hours of me releasing the first
edition of The Good Country Index
I started receiving thousands of
beautiful hate mails from trolls
all over the world, demanding to know
why the country they hate ranks so high.
and the country they love ranks so low,
and how I cooked up the entire thing
just to produce that specific result
and annoy them personally.
(Laughter)
And we have conversations about
these things and we argue about it,
and at the end I'd always say
the same thing, "Look, it's working."
I don't know if I'm right
or you're right.
But in the end, we are
discussing the right thing.
We are talking about not
how well is your country doing,
but how much is your country doing.
And that's what it was
supposed to achieve.
So by pushing the direction of
the argument, the conversation,
towards a new way of looking at countries,
then I think that it's pushing
the agenda forward.
So, my colleague Robert Govers and I
just released the latest edition
of The Good Country Index.
I'll just give you a very quick glimpse
of what's going on there.
Finland came first.
One of these days, somebody is going to
invent a country ranking
that does not have
a nordic country in the top ten.
(Laughter)
An index of modesty perhaps.
Anyway well done Finland, seriously!
It's absolutely great.
And another rather interesting thing
happened in this latest edition
of The Good Country Index,
and that was
what you can see if you go to the
slightly lower in the Index,
that the USA has various reasons sunk
quite a long way since the last edition,
and Russia for various reasons has risen.
And we now have this peculiar situation
where the USA and Russia
relative to the size of their economies,
are neck and neck,
quite a long way down the Index.
It's like two mean kids holding hands
at the edge of the playground
and refusing to join the others.
(Laughter) (Cheering) (Applause)
But hey, it's an interesting result,
but in the end, I'm afraid to say that
the world hasn't changed very much
since the first one came out in 2014.
It's still America first, Britain first,
Russia first, Germany first.
And in a way I understand that.
I don't have a problem with it.
I mean after all, if you are elected
to run a country, it's pretty obvious
that you put that
country's interest first.
But what I find rather demoralising
about those kinds of sentiments
is the implication that
everybody else has to come last.
And this is what I dispute.
I think we can all come first.
A nice thing about
the job I've been doing
for the last 20 years or so
advising governments around the world
and trying out real policies
in the real world,
is that it's perfectly
possible to harmonise
your domestic and your
international responsibilities.
You can do the right thing
for your own people,
and you can do the right thing
for humanity at the same time
without sacrificing yourself.
And the funny thing is,
it makes better policies.
This is something that most
governments have simply never tried.
So on to the second thing
that's stopping the world working
the slightly more complicated issue
of the behaviour of us humans.
Well, to get started on this.
I thought it'd be interesting to try
to find out how many people in the world
already agree with
some of these basic principles,
the ones outlined behind
The Good Country Index.
So Robert and I did some research
and we discovered that no less than
10% of the world's population
appears to fully share
the principles of The Good Country,
the idea that countries should collaborate
and cooperate a great deal more,
and compete a tiny bit less.
This is great news. 10 percent,
that's 760 million people.
If that were a nation, that would be
the third largest nation on the planet
after China and India.
And I have to admit when
those numbers came out,
I got very excited.
But then on mature reflection,
I realised that actually
the counterpart of that is that
90% of the people in the world
don't agree with that proposition.
I think if one was going to
take this challenge seriously,
one has to focus on the 90%.
It's not enough just to sell messages
to the people who already agree with you,
and try to make them make
tiny tweaks in their behaviour
because frankly, it's too late for that.
We are in too much of a hurry.
We need big change,
we need it very soon.
In fact, we need it right now.
So how can we deeply educate
the majority of the world's population
to behave in a way which is more
friendly to the world we live in
and more friendly to each other?
Because by the way, when I was speaking
of trolls, of course it reminded me
of this strange idea that emerged recently
and I don't know where it came from
that the people who
care more about local things
and people like me who
care more about global things
should be enemies.
Who thought of this idea?
This is the most dangerous idea
in the world at the moment,
and I think we should all look out for it
and challenge it whenever we hear it.
The people who care more
about local things
and the people who care more
about global things shouldn't be enemies.
They should be working together.
We should be glad that each other exists.
There isn't time for this kind of
childish tribalism.
We need to get on and fix things.
While anyway as I was saying
the 90% need to be fundamentally
educated in a different way.
And I started looking at some
of the websites of the NGOs,
and the campaigning
organisations and the charities,
and I began to notice there was
a common theme emerging.
There was a sentence, which in
one form or another
kept on cropping up.
And the sentence was something like this,
"And we should leave the world
in a better state for our children."
And I've tried to read this sentence
about 93 times in different places.
I began thinking to myself,
"you know that's pretty arrogant really."
The idea you could
take something huge
like climate change, huge systemic problem
or conflict or migration
that's taken billions of people
centuries to perpetrate,
you are gonna fix it
before you check out?
(Laughter)
It's this kind of arrogance and impatience
that causes more problems than it solves.
If we only have the nerve,
if we only have the courage
to give it one generation,
we can fix everything and
we can fix it for good.
Because every single day that passes
humanity has opportunity to start again.
Because every single day that passes
new children are born,
and they can learn in new ways.
So there is a solution to every
single challenge facing humanity.
It's called education.
But we need to do it in a new way
and a different way
and a much more ambitious way
than we've done it before.
Imagine if you wield a test tube rack
of the sort you probably had
when you studied science at school.
And in this test tube rack made of wood
there are 7, 8, 10 I don't know
little glass test tubes, and each one
contains a different coloured liquid.
And each one of those liquids
is a vaccine, an educational vaccine
against the behaviours that cause
climate change, conflicts,
human right abuses, terrorism, migration
pandemic and all the rest of it.
And if we administer these educational
vaccines to all of our children,
in the next generation, they will be
incapable of continuing the behaviours
that we have indulged in for so long.
If we teach our children
cultural anthropology at the age of 6,
it's a wonderful subject for 6 year olds.
They grow up taking a scientific pride
in understanding cultural differences.
They are immunised
against the ignorance
leads to prejudice and intolerance.
I know that one works because
I experimented on my children
and it works a charm.
(Laughter)
If we want to lessen
the speed of climate change,
we need to teach our children
oceanography and meteorology,
maybe one day they'll
switch off the light
when they leave the bedroom.
(Laugher)
We need to teach our children hygiene
so that there is less disease.
We need to teach them to meditate
so there is less mental illness,
they learn to have more empathy
more understanding and kindness
towards everybody else.
There are so many subjects.
I can't decide which ones they should be.
What I think we need to do is
to have a big global discussion
on the internet
where everybody puts in their own idea
about what should be
the next set of values
we are going to teach the next
generation of children
so they can run towards
the global challenges
instead of running away
from them as we've done.
And we can do this.
Next year, it will be my aim, my ambition
to have one hundred ministers of education
signing up to this new global compact
of educational values.
UNESCO has already signed a letter
that they would like to support this
if we can get it going.
And if you have any doubts
about whether it's possible
for humanity to engage
in such a big common project
despite all of that cultural differences,
we'll just have a think about
the United National's charter
or the human rights documentation.
Have a read if you
haven't read it for a while.
These are the most beautiful documents
ever produced by humanity,
and they really give you faith,
because they remind you as you read them
that we are capable of
behaving like a single species
inhabiting a single planet.
We can do it if we really want to
and if we do it at scale.
The good news is that it's more
about joining up the dots than
starting from scratch.
Because there're hundreds and
hundreds if not thousands of projects
around the world at the moment,
finding and experimenting different ways
of educating children so they
behave better in the future.
The trouble is they are mostly
single topics and in single countries.
There's no time for doing it slowly now.
We need to do it big,
and we need to do it in one go.
Greta Thunberg, the 16 year old
Swedish climate activist
is beginning to discover and beginning
to show us how very difficult it is
to persuade grown-ups
to change their behaviour.
But the simple fact to the matter is
that we can see that a lot of children
have got the right attitude,
but they don't have the solutions.
Some adults have the solutions but they
definitely don't have the right attitude.
And so guess what, it's another
necessity for collaboration,
the children and the grown-ups
working together.
We all have to think very hard now
about being better human beings.
And that's about being better citizens,
both locally and globally.
But it's also perhaps mainly
about being better ancestors.
If we can do that,
we can make the world work.
Thank you.
(Applause) (Cheering)