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Rich club unveils 'happiness' index

Paris - A so-called happiness index to measure well-being and perceptions of living conditions came into life at the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on Tuesday.

Called officially Your better life index, the new measure is part of a wider OECD programme to measure well-being and progress and was launched to mark the 50th anniversary of the organisation.

The index covers 11 areas: housing, income, employment, social relationships, education, the environment, the administration of institutions, health, general satisfaction, security and the balance between work and family.

OECD secretary general Angel Gurria said: "This index encapsulates the OECD at 50, pushing the boundaries of knowledge and understanding in a pioneering and innovative manner."

He said: "People around the world have wanted to go beyond GDP (gross domestic product) for some time. This index is designed for them. It has extraordinary potential to help us deliver better policies for better lives."

The head of statistics at the OECD, Martine Durand, said the idea was to measure more closely matters which people thought were important to them.

The index is intended to enable people in the 34 OECD member countries to compare their countries according to criteria which they think are important, Durand said.

The OECD hopes to make the index applicable to other countries soon, beginning with emerging economies such as Brazil.

The index is the first concrete result of a report by former Nobel economics prizewinner Joseph Stiglitz, OECD officials said.

The index comes into being as the Paris-based OECD celebrates its 50th anniversary and immediately before a summit of Group of Eight (G8) leaders in Deauville, northern France.

France holds the presidency of the G8, and a commission headed by Stiglitz in September 2009 submitted proposals for improving the way growth is measured to overcome shortcomings in the main measure of growth, the index of gross domestic product, to President Nicolas Sarkozy.

The OECD has worked for some years on ways of calculating a well-being index to complement the GDP and other indicators.
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