A handbook for wellbeing policy-making : : history, theory, measurement, implementation, and examples / / Paul Frijters and Christian Krekel.

"Around the world, governments are starting to directly measure the subjective wellbeing of their citizens and to use it for policy evaluation and appraisal. What would happen if a country were to move from using GDP to using subjective wellbeing as the primary metric for measuring economic and...

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Place / Publishing House:Oxford, England ;, New York, New York : : Oxford University Press,, [2021]
©2021
Year of Publication:2021
Language:English
Physical Description:1 online resource (xix, 433 pages) :; illustrations
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Other title:Handbook for Wellbeing Policy-Making
Summary:"Around the world, governments are starting to directly measure the subjective wellbeing of their citizens and to use it for policy evaluation and appraisal. What would happen if a country were to move from using GDP to using subjective wellbeing as the primary metric for measuring economic and societal progress? Would policy priorities change? Would we continue to care about economic growth? What role would different government institutions play in such a scenario? And, most importantly, how could this be implemented in daily practice, for example in policy evaluations and appraisals of government analysts, or in political agenda-setting at the top level? This book provides answers to these questions from a conceptual to a technical level by showing how direct measures of subjective wellbeing can be used for policy evaluation and appraisal, either complementary in the short run or even entirely in the long run. It gives a brief history of the idea that governments should care about the happiness of their citizens, provides theories, makes suggestions for direct measurement, derives technical standards, shows how to conduct wellbeing cost-effectiveness and cost-benefit analyses, and gives examples of how real-world policy evaluations and appraisals would change if they were based on subjective wellbeing. In doing so, the book serves the growing interest of governments as well as non-governmental and international organizations in how to put subjective wellbeing metrics into policy practice"--
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Paul Frijters and Christian Krekel.