Wednesday, August 27, 2014

BLI - OECD Better Life Index

2017 OECD’s "How’s Life?" exposes deep divisions in well-being > .
23-7-2 What Everyone Gets Wrong About Global Debt | EcEx > .

The OECD Better Life Index, created in May 2011 by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development following a decade of work on this issue, is a first attempt to bring together internationally comparable measures of well-being in line with the recommendations of the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress also known as the Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi Commission. The recommendations made by this Commission sought to address concerns that standard macroeconomic statistics like GDP failed to give a true account of people's current and future well-being. The OECD Better Life Initiative includes two main elements: "Your Better Life Index" and "How's Life?"

Your Better Life Index (BLI), launched in May 2011, is an interactive tool that allows people to compare countries' performances according to their own preferences in terms of what makes for a better life. It was designed by Berlin-based agency Raureif in collaboration with Moritz Stefaner. First published on 24 May 2011, it includes 11 "dimensions" of well-being:
  1. Housing: housing conditions and spendings (e.g. real estate pricing)
  2. Income: household income (after taxes and transfers) and net financial wealth
  3. Jobs: earnings, job security and unemployment
  4. Community: quality of social support network
  5. Education: education and what one gets out of it
  6. Environment: quality of environment (e.g. environmental health)
  7. Governance: involvement in democracy
  8. Health
  9. Life Satisfaction: level of happiness
  10. Safety: murder and assault rates
  11. Work–life balance
Canberra has been ranked as the world's most liveable city according to the OECD Better Life Index for the second consecutive year, based on results published on 6 October 2014.

How's Life? offers a comprehensive picture of what makes up people's lives in 40 countries worldwide. The report assesses the above 11 specific aspects of life as part of the OECD's ongoing effort to devise new measures for assessing well-being that go beyond GDP.

New indicators and dimensions are planned be added to the Better Life Index in the future. For example, the Better Life Index was criticised for not showing inequalities in a society. Future editions of the index are planned to take inequalities into account, by focusing on well-being achievements of specific groups of the population (women and men and low and high socio-economic status).

From an econometric point of view, the Index seems similar to other efforts aimed at substituting or complementing the gross domestic product (GDP) measure by an econometric model for measuring happiness and well-being of the population. One major criticism is that the Better Life Index uses a limited subset of indicators used by other econometric models such as Gross National Well-being Index 2005, Sustainable Society Index of 2008, and Bhutan Gross National Happiness Index of 2012, and Social Progress Index of 2013. Observers argue that "the 11 dimensions still cannot fully capture what is truly important to a populace, such as social networks that sustain relationships, and freedom of speech.". Various critics have pointed out that the OECD's BLI does not include such dimensions as poverty, economic inequality, access to health insurance and healthcare, environmental and air pollution.

In 2012 OECD relaunched "with new indicators on inequality and gender plus rankings for Brazil and Russia. A couple have been removed too: Governance has been renamed civic engagement, employment rate of women with children has been replaced by the full integration of gender information in the employment data and students' cognitive skills (e.g. student skills in reading, math and sciences) has replaced students' reading skills to have a broader view."

Some argue that some of the criteria are vague and question the purpose of such measure, for example, they question, "what really constitutes "environmental quality"? Can it result in population control policy to minimize damage to the environment? While others argue that the Better Life Index unlike the Gross National Happiness Index does not pay attention to religion. Critics also state that the Better Life Index ignores good family life, or moral formation. Others have criticized its methodology such as the use of relative scores instead of absolute ones.

Blue Economy

Oceans & Conservation - TeMa >> .


British Economy - Interbellum

.British Economy after WW1 - Fear of The Bolshevik Brit 1921 - tgw > .


Tuesday, August 26, 2014

CAATSA & Sanctions


The Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (CAATSA) is a United States federal law that imposed sanctions on Iran, North Korea, and Russia. The bill was passed by the Senate on 27 July 2017, 98–2, after it passed the House 419–3. 

On 15 June 2017, the United States Senate voted 98 to 2 for the bill (an amendment to the underlying Iran sanctions bill), which was rooted in a bill introduced in January that year by a bipartisan group of senators over Russia's continued involvement in the wars in Ukraine and Syria and its interference in the 2016 election; with regard to Russia, the bill was designed to expand the punitive measures previously imposed by executive orders and convert them into law. The bill in the Senate incorporated the provisions of the Countering Russian Influence in Europe and Eurasia Act that was introduced in May 2017 by Senator Ben Cardin.

An identical bill was introduced by Democrats in the House of Representatives on 12 July 2017. While the bill's text was unchanged from what had passed the Senate on 15 June, it was titled as House legislation to avoid procedural hurdles. The bill, after being revised to address some of the Trump administration's concerns, passed in the House 419 to 3 on 25 July. On 27 July, the bill was passed overwhelmingly by the Senate, 98 to 2. Both votes, veto-proof majorities.

The bill was signed into law on 2 August 2017 by UNpresident DUHnocchio, who stated [with zero understanding] that he believed the legislation was "seriously flawed".

Canada - Economy

.
Economy Of Canada: Northern Powerhouse? - EcAlt > .
24-4-6 Australia & Canada - 2 Economies, 1 Set of Flaws | Econ > .
24-2-24 Canada Can't Solve It's Population Problem with Immigration - EcEx > .
23-11-23 How much federal debt can Canada carry? | About That | CBC > .
23-11-13 How US Lost Thousands Of High-Skilled Workers To Canada - CNBC > .
23-7-23 Arctic is heating fast! - Just > . Arctic Straits > .
23-7-21 Canada’s Arctic Patrol Ships Will Secure the Northern Frontier - USNI > .
23-3-1 CSIS & How Xina Bought Canada’s Elections - Uncensored > .
22-12-28 Demographics Part 2: The Canadian Treadmill...Stops - PZ > .
22-8-3 Stagnating Economy of Canada - EcEx > .
Canada : The water superpower - AtCan > .


The Canadian Economy is a paradox, highly advanced but dependent on natural resources. As the world’s second largest country, land has always played a huge role. Though over time, this has led to speculation over just how dependent Canada’s Economy is on land directly, possessing the third largest oil reserves in the world and increasingly, a booming housing market.
 
Raising some key questions. Such as how dependent is Canada on oil? What role have Canada's free trade agreements played? And is the Canadian housing market a bubble?

Canada is one of the richest and most prosperous countries in the world, and has one of the highest levels of quality of life. However, things weren't always this good in Canada. Between the 80s and 90s the country suffered a severe crisis that shook its solvency.

sī vīs pācem, parā bellum

igitur quī dēsīderat pācem praeparet bellum    therefore, he who desires peace, let him prepare for war sī vīs pācem, parā bellum if you wan...