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Measuring non-economic well-being achievement

journal contribution
posted on 2005-06-01, 00:00 authored by Mark McGillivray
Income per capita and most widely reported, non- or non-exclusively income based human well-being indicators are highly correlated among countries. Yet many countries exhibit higher achievement in the latter than predicted by the former. The reverse is true for many other countries. This paper commences by extracting the inter-country variation in a composite of various widely-reported, non-income-based well-being indices not accounted for by variations in income pre capita. This extraction is interpreted inter alia as a measure of non-economic well-being. The paper then looks at correlations between this extraction and a number of new or less widely-used well-being measures, in an attempt to find the measure that best captures these achievements. A number of indicators are examined, including measures of poverty, inequality, health status, education status, gender bias, empowerment, governance and subjective well-being.

History

Journal

Review of Income and Wealth

Volume

51

Issue

2

Pagination

337 - 364

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Location

New Haven, Conn.

ISSN

0034-6586

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

Journal compilation 2010 International Association for Research in Income and Wealth

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