Paste text below
Text entered
ideas. It is essential that the set of measures of well-being is relevant and well-based in what matters to people, both as individuals and for the UK as a whole. ”
“The UK is not alone in wanting to develop better measures of National Well-being. We are working with international partners in developing measures of well-being that will paint a fuller picture of our societies. This is a long-term programme. ONS will continue to consult with users and policy makers as we develop the measures. This will ensure that UK well-being measures are reliable and impartial and improve our understanding of the UK's society.”
People in the UK believe that National Well-being should be measured, stating health, friends and family, and job satisfaction as some of the key things that should feature in the measurements according to a report on the National Well-being debate published today.
The national debate on ‘what matters to you?’ which was launched in November last year, generated over 34,000 responses, online and via events. People across the UK gave their views on the things that matter to them most in life, for their individual well-being and for measuring the well-being of the UK. Common themes to be reflected in the design of measurement indicators are: health; good connections with friends and family; job satisfaction and economic security; present and future conditions of the environment; and education and training. The first set of national well-being indicators will be published in the autumn, for comment and further development.
National Statistician Jil Matheson said
“The response to the debate was huge and thoughtful. The UK public were definitely keen to tell us what is important to them and I am pleased that we have been able to give so many people a place to discuss what national well-being means on both a personal and national level.”
People of all ages highlighted the importance of family, friends, health, financial security, equality and fairness in determining well-being.”
“However, this is not just about holding a debate it is about finding robust ways to measure how society is doing, to complement GDP and other measures of economic growth. As we work up measures of national well-being and progress, we will continue to share ourideas. It is essential that the set of measures of well-being is relevant and well-based in what matters to people, both as individuals and for the UK as a whole. ”
“The UK is not alone in wanting to develop better measures of National Well-being. We are working with international partners in developing measures of well-being that will paint a fuller picture of our societies. This is a long-term programme. ONS will continue to consult with users and policy makers as we develop the measures. This will ensure that UK well-being measures are reliable and impartial and improve our understanding of the UK's society.”As well as holding the debate, the ONS started in April to measure subjective (individual) well-being by including four new questions in the Integrated Household Survey (IHS). Around 200,000 people are being asked to rate their ‘life satisfaction’ on a scale of nought to ten, as well as how happy and how anxious they feel, and the extent to which the things they do in life are worthwhile.
The first annual results will be available in July 2012. ONS plans to make interim results available, based on part year data, including helping to design presentations of the new subjective well-being information.
Text entered is not saved. Save now
Save above text so that it can be shared and viewed side-by-side with news articles
- East of England Roadworks ...
- Motley Fool
- Famous police dog retires
- Motorists can save 10p per litre ...
- Tai Chi exercise may reduce ...
- BBC Good Food Show and ...
- Breakthrough brain study reveals ...
- Weekly summary of roadworks for M25
- Weekly summary of roadworks in ...
- Good intentions ease pain, add ...
- Tango...Echo...Sierra...Charlie. ...
- Work on congestion-busting M25 ...
- Self-employed tax credit cheats ...
- Tesco staff share in â£126 ...
- Aria Foods: 1 in 4 children ...
- Alicia Douvall reveals agony of ...
- Extra time to celebrate royal ...
- Tesco banishes shoppers budget ...
- Two die in A1 crash
- Fight the flight tax campaign
| 5 news articles similar to text entered | Visualisation | Side-by-side | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| , |
cut |
pasted |
characters |
|||
Loading news articles
Text entered
ideas. It is essential that the set of measures of well-being is relevant and well-based in what matters to people, both as individuals and for the UK as a whole. ”
“The UK is not alone in wanting to develop better measures of National Well-being. We are working with international partners in developing measures of well-being that will paint a fuller picture of our societies. This is a long-term programme. ONS will continue to consult with users and policy makers as we develop the measures. This will ensure that UK well-being measures are reliable and impartial and improve our understanding of the UK's society.”
People in the UK believe that National Well-being should be measured, stating health, friends and family, and job satisfaction as some of the key things that should feature in the measurements according to a report on the National Well-being debate published today.
The national debate on ‘what matters to you?’ which was launched in November last year, generated over 34,000 responses, online and via events. People across the UK gave their views on the things that matter to them most in life, for their individual well-being and for measuring the well-being of the UK. Common themes to be reflected in the design of measurement indicators are: health; good connections with friends and family; job satisfaction and economic security; present and future conditions of the environment; and education and training. The first set of national well-being indicators will be published in the autumn, for comment and further development.
National Statistician Jil Matheson said
“The response to the debate was huge and thoughtful. The UK public were definitely keen to tell us what is important to them and I am pleased that we have been able to give so many people a place to discuss what national well-being means on both a personal and national level.”
People of all ages highlighted the importance of family, friends, health, financial security, equality and fairness in determining well-being.”
“However, this is not just about holding a debate it is about finding robust ways to measure how society is doing, to complement GDP and other measures of economic growth. As we work up measures of national well-being and progress, we will continue to share ourideas. It is essential that the set of measures of well-being is relevant and well-based in what matters to people, both as individuals and for the UK as a whole. ”
“The UK is not alone in wanting to develop better measures of National Well-being. We are working with international partners in developing measures of well-being that will paint a fuller picture of our societies. This is a long-term programme. ONS will continue to consult with users and policy makers as we develop the measures. This will ensure that UK well-being measures are reliable and impartial and improve our understanding of the UK's society.”As well as holding the debate, the ONS started in April to measure subjective (individual) well-being by including four new questions in the Integrated Household Survey (IHS). Around 200,000 people are being asked to rate their ‘life satisfaction’ on a scale of nought to ten, as well as how happy and how anxious they feel, and the extent to which the things they do in life are worthwhile.
The first annual results will be available in July 2012. ONS plans to make interim results available, based on part year data, including helping to design presentations of the new subjective well-being information.
Churn statistics
cut
pasted
characters overlap