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On January 4, 1934,
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a young man delivered a report
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to the United States Congress
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that 80 years on,
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still shapes the lives of
everyone in this room today,
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still shapes the lives of
everyone on this planet.
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That young man wasn't a politician,
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he wasn't a businessman,
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a civil rights activist
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or a faith leader.
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He was that most unlikely of heroes,
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an economist.
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His name was Simon Kuznets
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and the report that
he delivered was called
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"National Income, 1929-1932."
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Now, you might think
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this is a rather dry and dull report.
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And you're absolutely right.
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It's dry as a bone.
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But this report is the foundation
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of how, today, we judge the
success of countries:
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what we know best as
Gross Domestic Product,
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GDP.
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GDP has defined and shaped our lives
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for the last 80 years.
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And today I want to talk about
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a different way to measure
the success of countries,
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a different way to define
and shape our lives
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for the next 80 years.
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But first, we have to understand
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how GDP came to
dominate our lives.
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Kuznets' report was delivered
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at a moment of crisis.
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The U.S. economy was plummeting
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into the Great Depression
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and policy makers were
struggling to respond.
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Struggling because they didn't
know what was going on.
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They didn't have data and statistics.
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So what Kuznet's report gave them
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was reliable data on what
the U.S. economy
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was producing,
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updated year by year.
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And armed with this information,
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policy makers were, eventually,
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able to find a way out
of the slump.
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And because Kuznets' invention
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was found to be so useful,
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it spread around the world.
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And now today, every country
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produces GDP statistics.
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But, in that first report,
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Kuznets himself delivered a warning.
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It's in the introductory chapter.
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On page seven he says,
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"The welfare of a nation can, therefore,
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scarcely be inferred
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from a measurement of
national income
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as defined above."
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It's not the greatest sound
bite in the world,
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and it's dressed up in the cautious
language of the economist.
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But his message was clear:
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GDP is a tool
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to help us measure
economic performance.
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It's not a measure
of our well-being.
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And it shouldn't be a guide
to all decision making.
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But we have ignored Kuznets' warning.
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We live in a world where
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GDP is the benchmark of success
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in a global economy.
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Our politicians boast when
GDP goes up.
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Markets move
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and trillions of dollars of capital
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move around the world
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based on which countries
are going up
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and which countries
are going down,
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all measured in GDP.
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Our societies have become
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engines to create more GDP.
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But we know that GDP is flawed.
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It ignores the environment.
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It counts bombs and prisons as progress.
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It can't count happiness or community.
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And it has nothing to say
about fairness or justice.
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Is it any surprise that our world,
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marching to the drumbeat of GDP,
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is teetering on the brink
of environmental disaster
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and filled with anger and conflict?
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We need a better way
to measure our societies,
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a measure based on the real
things that matter to real people.
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Do I have enough to eat?
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Can I read and write?
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Am I safe?
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Do I have rights?
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Do I live in a society where
I'm not discriminated against?
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Is my future and the future of my children
prevented from environmental destruction?
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These are questions that GDP
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does not and cannot answer.
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There have, of course,
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been efforts in the past
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to move beyond GDP.
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But I believe that we're living
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in a moment when we
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are ready for a measurement revolution.
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We're ready because we've seen,
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in the financial crisis of 2008,
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how our fetish for economic growth
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led us so far astray.
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We've seen, in the Arab Spring,
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how countries like Tunisia
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were supposedly economic superstars,
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but they were societies
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that were seething with discontentment.
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We're ready, because today
we have the technology
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to gather and analyze data
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in ways that would have been
unimaginable to Kuznets.
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Today, I'd like to introduce you
to the Social Progress Index.
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It's a measure of the
well-being of society,
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completely separate from GDP.
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It's a whole new way
of looking at the world.
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The Social Progress Index
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begins by defining what it
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means to be a good society
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based around three dimensions.
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The first is, does everyone have
the basic needs for survival:
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food, water, shelter, safety?
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Secondly, does everyone have
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access to the building blocks
to improve their lives:
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education, information, health
and sustainable environment?
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And then third, does every
individual have access
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to a chance to pursue their goals
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and dreams and ambitions
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free from obstacles?
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Do they have rights,
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freedom of choice,
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freedom from discrimination
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and access to the the world's
most advanced knowledge?
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Together, these 12 components
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form the Social Progress framework.
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And for each of these 12 components,
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we have indicators to measure
how countries are performing.
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Not indicators of effort or intention,
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but real achievement.
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We don't measure how much
a country spends on healthcare,
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we measure the length and
quality of people's lives.
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We don't measure whether governments
pass laws against discrimination,
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we measure whether people
experience discrimination.
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But what you want to know
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is who's top, don't you?
(Laughter)
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I knew that, I knew that, I knew that.
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Okay, I'm going to show you.
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I'm going to show you on this chart.
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So here we are,
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what I've done here is put on the
vertical axis social progress.
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Higher is better.
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And then, just for comparison,
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just for fun,
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on the horizontal axis
is GDP per capita.
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Further to the right is more.
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So the country in the world
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with the highest social progress,
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the number one country on social progress
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is New Zealand.
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(Applause)
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Well done! Never been; must go.
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(Laughter)
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The country with the least social progress,
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I'm sorry to say, is Chad.
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I've never been; maybe next year.
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(Laughter)
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Or maybe the year after.
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Now, I know what you're thinking.
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You're thinking, "Aha,
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but New Zealand has a higher GDP
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than Chad!"
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It's a good point, well made.
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But let me show you
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two other countries.
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Here's the United States —
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considerably richer than New Zealand,
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but with a lower level of social progress.
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And then here's Senegal —
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it's got a higher level of
social progress than Chad,
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but the same level of GDP.
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So what's going on? Well, look.
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Let me bring in the rest of
the countries of the world,
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the 132 we've been able to measure,
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each one represented by a dot.
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There we go. Lots of dots.
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Now, obviously I can't do all of them,
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so a few highlights for you:
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The highest ranked G7 country is Canada.
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My country, the United Kingdom,
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is sort of middling, sort of dull,
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but who cares —
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at least we beat the French.
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(Laughter)
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And then looking at the
emerging economies,
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top of the bricks,
pleased to say, is Brazil.
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(Applause)
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Come on, cheer!
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Go, Brazil!
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Beating South Africa,
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then Russia,
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then China
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and then India.
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Tucked away on the right-hand side,
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you will see a dot of a
country with a lot of GDP
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but not a huge amount
of social progress —
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that's Kuwait.
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Just above Brazil
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is a social progress superpower —
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that's Costa Rica.
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It's got a level of social progress the same
as some Western European countries,
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with a much lower GDP.
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Now, my slide is getting
a little cluttered
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and I'd like to step back a bit.
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So let me take away these countries,
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and then pop in the regression line.
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So this shows the average relationship
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between GDP and social progress.
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The first thing to notice,
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is that there's lots of noise
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around the trend line.
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And what this shows,
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what this empirically demonstrates,
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is that GDP is not destiny.
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At every level of GDP per capita,
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there are opportunities
for more social progress,
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risks of less.
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The second thing to notice
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is that for poor countries,
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the curve is really steep.
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So what this tells us is that
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if poor countries can get
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a little bit of extra GDP,
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and if they reinvest that
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in doctors, nurses, water supplies,
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sanitation, etc.,
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there's a lot of social progress bang
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for your GDP buck.
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And that's good news, and that's what
we've seen over the last 20, 30 years,
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with a lot of people lifted out of poverty
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by economic growth and good policies
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in poorer countries.
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But go on a bit further up the curve,
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and then we see it flattening out.
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Each extra dollar of GDP
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is buying less and less social progress.
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And with more and more
of the world's population
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living on this part of the curve,
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it means GDP is becoming
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less and less useful
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as a guide to our development.
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I'll show you an example of Brazil.
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Here's Brazil:
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social progress of about 70 out of 100,
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GDP per capita about
14,000 dollars a year.
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And look, Brazil's above the line.
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Brazil is doing a reasonably good job
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of turning GDP into social progress.
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But where does Brazil go next?
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Let's say that Brazil
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adopts a bold economic plan
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to double GDP in the next decade.
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But that is only half a plan.
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It's less than half a plan,
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because where does Brazil
want to go on social progress?
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Brazil, it's possible
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to increase your growth,
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increase your GDP,
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while stagnating or going backwards
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on social progress.
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We don't want Brazil
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to become like Russia.
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What you really want is for Brazil
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to get ever more efficient at creating
social progress from its GDP,
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so it becomes more like New Zealand.
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And what that means is that
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Brazil needs to prioritize social progress
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in its development plan
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and see that it's not just growth alone,
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it's growth with social progress.
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And that's what the Social
Progress Index does:
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It reframes the debate about development,
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not just about GDP alone,
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but inclusive, sustainable growth
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that brings real improvements
in people's lives.
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And it's not just about countries.
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Earlier this year,
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with our friends from the Imazon
nonprofit here in Brazil,
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we launched the first subnational
Social Progress Index.
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We did it for the Amazon region.
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It's an area the size of
Europe, 24 million people,
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one of the most deprived
parts of the country.
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And here are the results,
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and this is broken down
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into nearly 800 different municipalities.
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And with this detailed information
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about the real quality of life
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in this part of the country,
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Imazon and other partners
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from government,
business and civil society
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can work together to construct
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a development plan
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that will help really improve
people's lives,
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while protecting that
precious global asset
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that is the Amazon Rainforest.
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And this is just the beginning,
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You can create a Social Progress Index
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for any state, region,
city or municipality.
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We all know and love TEDx;
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this is Social Pogress-x.
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This is a tool for anyone to come and use.
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Contrary to the way we
sometimes talk about it,
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GDP was not handed down from
God on tablets of stone. (Laughter)
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It's a measurement tool
invented in the 20th century
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to address the challenges
of the 20th century.
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In the 21st century,
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we face new challenges:
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aging, obesity, climate change, and so on.
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To face those challenges,
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we need new tools of measurement,
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new ways of valuing progress.
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Imagine if we could measure
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what nonprofits, charities,
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volunteers, civil society organizations
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really contribute to our society.
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Imagine if businesses competed
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not just on the basis of
their economic contribution,
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but on their contribution
to social progress.
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Imagine if we could hold
politicians to account
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for really improving people's lives.
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Imagine if we could work together —
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government, business,
civil society, me, you —
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and make this century the
century of social progress.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)