2017
DOI: 10.1111/insr.12215
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From a System of National Accounts to a Process of National Wellbeing Accounting

Abstract: Summary There are repeated calls to go ‘Beyond GDP’, for measures of wellbeing and progress in addition to those that the System of National Accounts (SNA) is designed to provide. We identify key issues that can help build on the rigour of SNA whilst fitting the measurement of economic performance within a broader assessment of national wellbeing and progress. Such drivers are already leading to a proliferation of indicators and accounts, for example in the development of non‐monetary measures of natural resou… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
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“…Noteworthy is the fact that Krueger (2008) evidences concern with the differences among respondents in regards to questions on well-being, and Bond & Lang (2018) express doubts on how questions and answers on happiness are aggregated, considering that those measures are complementary and important indicators of well-being based on actual data. Allin & Hand (2017) state that the GDP is based on a solidly developed theoretical framework, one with a long tradition, which is (yet) not true about "well-being".…”
Section: The Gdp and Its Limitations In Measuring Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Noteworthy is the fact that Krueger (2008) evidences concern with the differences among respondents in regards to questions on well-being, and Bond & Lang (2018) express doubts on how questions and answers on happiness are aggregated, considering that those measures are complementary and important indicators of well-being based on actual data. Allin & Hand (2017) state that the GDP is based on a solidly developed theoretical framework, one with a long tradition, which is (yet) not true about "well-being".…”
Section: The Gdp and Its Limitations In Measuring Well-beingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Few economic researchers invest the time required to truly get to grips with the national accounts. Both Allin and Hand (2015) and Osterwald-Lenum (2015) point out that these statistics have become too complicated, and that their compilation is a producer-driven activity rather than a user-driven one. This is not to absolve economists.…”
Section: S226mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…e consumption of natural resources and the cost of environmental pollution are ignored in GDP accounting, and the accounting results do not truthfully reflect the rules of economic operation. Due to the neglect of the consumption of natural resources and the ecological environment in the process of production and operation activities, it is difficult for the economy to achieve sustainable development [2,3]. erefore, improving the original GDP accounting method has become one of the hot issues widely studied by scholars at home and abroad.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%