ERHNI : refinements and applications

In our paper, we propose for nations to shift emphasis from the current “production-oriented” measurement system to one which focuses on people’s well-being. As GDP is insufficient and that happiness can give us more information about actual utility, we should study happiness and make its maximizati...

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Main Authors: Chen, Enjiao, Toh, Jesselyn Shi Ying, Tan, Yu Fen
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59398
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-593982019-12-10T13:42:38Z ERHNI : refinements and applications Chen, Enjiao Toh, Jesselyn Shi Ying Tan, Yu Fen School of Humanities and Social Sciences Ng Yew Kwang DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics In our paper, we propose for nations to shift emphasis from the current “production-oriented” measurement system to one which focuses on people’s well-being. As GDP is insufficient and that happiness can give us more information about actual utility, we should study happiness and make its maximization a goal of policy. Subjective well-being measures can be reliable and valid, and are measured as life satisfaction, affect (emotion) balance or objectively in certain socioeconomic indicators, we believe that the affect perspective is most relevant. Having made the case for happiness as a viable and credible government goal, we select from amongst various indicators the ERHNI as a complementary measure of national success. Then, we make our contributions by refining ERHNI through first, better estimates of key variables, second, better accounting for external costs through the inclusion of other major greenhouse gases, third, increasing sample size and forth, using world average as a representative baseline instead of China. After which, we rank countries according to our revised ERHNI and compare the results against that of Ng’s (2008). Last but not least, we further extend an empirical application of the index by ascertaining the determinants of its cross-country variation, testing genetic, cultural and other objective influences. We find that internationally, objective living conditions seem to matter the most. Bachelor of Arts 2014-05-05T03:07:39Z 2014-05-05T03:07:39Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59398 en Nanyang Technological University 70 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Economic theory::Macroeconomics
Chen, Enjiao
Toh, Jesselyn Shi Ying
Tan, Yu Fen
ERHNI : refinements and applications
description In our paper, we propose for nations to shift emphasis from the current “production-oriented” measurement system to one which focuses on people’s well-being. As GDP is insufficient and that happiness can give us more information about actual utility, we should study happiness and make its maximization a goal of policy. Subjective well-being measures can be reliable and valid, and are measured as life satisfaction, affect (emotion) balance or objectively in certain socioeconomic indicators, we believe that the affect perspective is most relevant. Having made the case for happiness as a viable and credible government goal, we select from amongst various indicators the ERHNI as a complementary measure of national success. Then, we make our contributions by refining ERHNI through first, better estimates of key variables, second, better accounting for external costs through the inclusion of other major greenhouse gases, third, increasing sample size and forth, using world average as a representative baseline instead of China. After which, we rank countries according to our revised ERHNI and compare the results against that of Ng’s (2008). Last but not least, we further extend an empirical application of the index by ascertaining the determinants of its cross-country variation, testing genetic, cultural and other objective influences. We find that internationally, objective living conditions seem to matter the most.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Chen, Enjiao
Toh, Jesselyn Shi Ying
Tan, Yu Fen
format Final Year Project
author Chen, Enjiao
Toh, Jesselyn Shi Ying
Tan, Yu Fen
author_sort Chen, Enjiao
title ERHNI : refinements and applications
title_short ERHNI : refinements and applications
title_full ERHNI : refinements and applications
title_fullStr ERHNI : refinements and applications
title_full_unstemmed ERHNI : refinements and applications
title_sort erhni : refinements and applications
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/59398
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