» Saturday, October 25, 0110

PM Speech on well-being

Transcript of speech given by the Prime Minister on well-being, 25 November 2010.

Read the transcript:

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Introduction

Today the government is asking the Office for National Statistics to devise a new way of measuring well-being in Britain.

From April next year we will start measuring our progress as a country not just by how our economy is growing, but by how our lives are improving

not just by our standard of living, but by our quality of life.

This is something that is important to our goal of creating a more family-friendly country and it s something I ve been calling for for years.

But I know there are some people in this country who take a different view.

Over the past couple of weeks a few objections have become clear:

There is the worry that this is a distraction from the urgent economic tasks at hand.

There is the criticism that we cannot hope to improve people s well-being that this is beyond the realm of government.

And there is the suspicion that, frankly, the whole thing is a bit woolly and impractical; that you cannot possibly measure well-being, so don t bother trying.

I want to take each of these on directly today.

Growth

First and foremost, people are concerned that talking about well-being shows this government is sidelining economic growth as our first concern.

At a time when we are recovering from the longest and deepest recession since the war, they say all our energies should be focussed on driving up GDP.

Let me be very clear.

Growth is the essential foundation of all our aspirations.

Without a job that pays a decent wage it s hard for people to look after their families in the way they want, whether that s taking the children on holiday or making home a more comfortable place.

Without money in your pocket it s difficult to do so many of the things we enjoy, from going out in the evening to shopping at the weekend.

So at this time I am clear that our most urgent priority is to get the economy moving, create jobs and spread opportunity to everyone.

That s why we re clearing up the mess left by the last government because if we let our debts spiral out of control, interest rates will go up, mortgage rates will rise and people will be hurt.

It s why we re doing everything possible to drive a new economic dynamism in our country making it easier for people to start their own business, cutting corporation tax, getting behind entrepreneurs.

It s why we re taking practical steps to rebalance our economy, with a Regional Growth Fund to stimulate enterprise and help create jobs right across the country.

And it is why we ll continue to measure GDP as we ve always done.

But it is high time we admitted that taken on its own, GDP is an incomplete way of measuring a country s progress.

The big problem is that it doesn t show you how growth is created.

When a country is hit by an earthquake, that can increase GDP because of the extra spending on re-construction afterwards.

When a city is torn apart by crime and disorder, that can increase GDP because of all the extra locks and security people buy.

When a person falls seriously ill, that can increase GDP because the cost of buying drugs and paying for care counts as economic activity.

Destruction, crime, disease in a very crude way all these things can amount to progress in terms of GDP.

The point is that all of life can t be measured on a balance sheet and no one put that better than Robert Kennedy more than forty years ago.

GDP does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play…

It measures neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.

Simple and profound words but we haven t heeded them in this country.

We ve seen an immigration free-for-all justified on the argument that it was good for growth with little thought about the impact on public services and social cohesion.

We saw a cheap booze free-for-all justified on the argument that it was good for growth with little thought about the impact on law and order.

We saw an irresponsible media and marketing free-for-all justified on the argument that it was good for growth with little thought about the impact on childhood.

It s because of this fundamentally flawed approach that for decades Western societies have seen the line of GDP rising steadily upwards but at the same time levels of contentment have remained static or even fallen.

Now there are some who leap on this as evidence that capitalism has failed and that money is the root of all misery.

I think that is na ve.

But we have got to recognise, officially, that economic growth is a means to an end.

If your goal in politics is to help make a better life for people which mine is

and if you know, both in your gut and from a huge body of evidence that prosperity alone can t deliver a better life which I do

then you have got to take practical steps to make sure government is properly focussed on our quality of life as well as economic growth, and that s what we are doing.

Government’s Influence on Well-Being

Now let me answer the charge that government can t affect how people feel, or do very much to improve well-being.

It s the argument that the business of government is mechanistic and highly practical, that what happens in Whitehall cannot reach into people s personal lives or feelings.

It s interesting that the people who most often rail against the negative impact that government can have on people s well-being

who campaigned against the closure of Post Offices for the loneliness it could cause for the elderly in rural areas

who criticised top-down targets in the public sector for the damage they did to workers morale

are often the ones who do not accept that it can work the other way that the actions that government takes can make people feel better as well as worse.

Of course you can t legislate for fulfilment or satisfaction, but I do believe government has the power to help improve well-being.

I m not alone in that belief.

A whole host of world-leading economists and social scientists including Nobel Prize winners Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen have developed a new school of thought about government s role in improving people s lives in the broadest sense.

Here with us today we have Lord Layard, Professor John Helliwell, Professor Felicia Huppert and academics from all over the world.

The contention is that just as we can create the climate for business to thrive by cutting taxes, slashing red tape and so on

so we can create a climate in this country that is more family-friendly and more conducive to the good life.

That s why I reject the criticism that government policy has no role in this area.

To those who say that all this sounds like a distraction from the serious business of government…

…I say finding out what will really improve lives and acting on it is the serious business of government.

Practical Application

Finally, let me address the suspicion that all this is a bit airy-fairy and impractical.

Of course you can t capture happiness on a spread-sheet, any more than you can bottle it.

If anyone was trying to reduce the whole spectrum of human emotion into one snapshot statistic I would be the first to roll my eyes.

But that isn t what this is about.

Just as the GDP figures don t give the full story of our economy s growth but do give a useful indicator of where we re heading

so this new measure won t give the full story of our nation s well-being but will give us a general picture of how life is improving.

And that has a real practical purpose.

First it s going to open up a national debate about what really matters not just in government but among all the people that influence our lives:

In the media. In business. The people who develop the products we use, who build the towns we live in, who shape the culture we enjoy.

And second, this information will help government work out, with evidence, the best ways of helping to improve people s well-being.

Of course we already have strong instincts about what will improve people s lives and we re acting on those instincts.

Our instinct that people who feel in control of their own destiny feel more fulfilled that s why we re giving parents real choice over schools and patients real choice over where they get treated.

Our instinct that having the purpose of a job is as important to the soul as it is to the bank balance it s there in our hugely ambitious Work Programme to get people off welfare.

Our instinct that most people have a real yearning to belong to something bigger than themselves it s leading our plans to bring neighbourhoods together, to increase social action and build the Big Society.

These are instincts we feel to the core but it s right that as far as possible we put them to the practical test, so we really know what matters to people.

Every day, Ministers, officials, people working throughout the public sector make decisions that affect people s lives.

This is about helping to make sure those government decisions on policy and spending are made in a balanced way, taking account of what really matters.

I ve said before that I want every decision we take to be judged on whether it makes our country more or less family-friendly and this new focus on well-being will be part of achieving that.

Parents need to know that the concerns they feel about the kind of country their children grow up in are felt and acted on by their government too.

That s why anyone who cares about community, about civility, about making this country more family-friendly should welcome what the Office for National Statistics is doing.

Conclusion

So this measure that we are setting out today reaffirms the fact that our success as a country is about more than economic growth.

It will open a national debate about how together we can build a better life.

It will help bring about a re-appraisal of what matters.

And in time it will lead to government policy that is more focussed not just on the bottom line, but on all those things that make life worthwhile.

original source.

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