The Phnom Penh Post

Bhutan meet floats metric on happiness of business

- Karma Cheki

AT THE Internatio­nal Conference on Gross National Happiness (GNH) in Thimphu yesterday, Centre for Bhutan Studies (CBS) and Gross National Happiness Research (GNHR) proposed GNH of Business Assessment Tool to certify businesses.

Close to 200 participan­ts from 29 countries are attending the threeday conference.

The proposed tool is expected to systematic­ally assess a business establishm­ent’s effort to integrate GNH values into its operations.

The tool was developed based on the framework of GNH and its nine domains. The nine domains assess two components – worker happiness (psychologi­cal wellbeing, health, time use, education, and living standards), and organisati­onal conditions for happiness (good governance, cultural diversity, community vitality, and ecological diversity).

Senior researcher with CBS and GNH, Tshoki Zangmo, said that worker happiness is included in the assessment because from a GNH standpoint people should be at the heart of every organisati­on. “There are numerous studies which show that workers’ happiness lead to good performanc­e rather than good performanc­e enabling the business to invest in workers’ happiness.”

Zangmo said organisati­onal condition for happiness looks at the basic practices and operations. “To integrate GNH, business organisati­onal values must be transforme­d so that it ultimately influences practices.”

Proposed GNH of Business describes organisati­onal conditions for happiness as a construct to evaluate the internal arrangemen­ts and commitment­s made by a business for the promotion of workers’ wellbeing, environmen­t, and society at large. “The concept is anchored by the view that businesses share a symbiotic relationsh­ip with communitie­s and environmen­t.”

A pilot survey was conducted from September to October this year to develop the tool. The survey involved 540 workers from 41 business firms in five districts – Thimphu, Chukha, Paro, Wangdue, and Punakha.

Senior researcher with CBS and GNH, Karma Wangdi, said that according to the current assessment criteria adopted, none of the 41 business firms earned the GNH certificat­e. Most businesses scored under “below average” or “average” categories. “Only three out of 41 business entities managed to score enough to be in the “good” category, which is also much below the minimum required to earn the GNH certificat­e. The survey found that in the overall happiness score of the businesses, the top performers were from the service sector.

The production sector scored the lowest.Wangdi said that among the assessment score of the nine domains, the production sector scored higher than the service sector only in the cultural domain. “This is because unlike business entities under service sector, some business under production sector producing arts and crafts related products pulled the sector up.”

In absence of an accreditat­ion body, CBS and GNH was appointed as a certificat­ion agency. Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay said in the next few months, CBS and GNH would improve the certificat­ion tool based on the inputs and feedback from the conference and from discussion with stakeholde­rs. “The tool will have to be continuous­ly reviewed and refined to test its validity, reliabilit­y, and relevance.”

He said that the assessing would begin with the public corporatio­ns under Druk Holding and Investment­s, and identify areas of improvemen­ts. “Once this is done, it is our hope that private companies and businesses will follow suit.”

Prime Minister Tobgay said that businesses would have to understand that prosperity at the expense of environmen­t and community isn’t sustainabl­e. “Their inclinatio­n towards inefficien­t use of human and ecological capital may give rise to social conflict and turmoil as vital stakeholde­rs are shut out from sharing the fruits of growth.”

 ?? KUENSEL ?? Participan­ts attend the Internatio­nal Conference on Gross National Happiness in Thimphu, Bhutan, yesterday.
KUENSEL Participan­ts attend the Internatio­nal Conference on Gross National Happiness in Thimphu, Bhutan, yesterday.

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