The Asian Age

FinMin rules out happiness index

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

The finance ministry on Tuesday told Rajya Sabha that it had no plan to implement Gross Domestic Happiness ( GDH) for measuring the overall growth of the country.

Critics have long pointed out that the GDP doesn’t capture overall well being of the citizens and there should be another index which also capture spiritual, physical, social and environmen­tal health of citizens.

Member of Parliament Amar Shankar Sable had asked whether the government is contemplat­ing to implement the process of fixing the criteria of Gross Domestic Happiness ( GDH) for measuring the overall growth.

“There is no such proposal at present with the Ministry of Finance,” said MoS ( finance) Pon Radhakrish­nan in a statement.

“As per the United Nations Statistics Division’s database on National Accounts Statistics, there is no country in the world that uses GDH procedure to assess the overall growth rate,” added the minister.

Since World War II, a nation’s success has been measured by the country’s economic output in monetary terms called Gross Domestic Product ( GDP).

However there has been also attempts to measure a country’s success through alternate means.

It was neighbouri­ng country Bhutan which first evolved the concept of Gross National Happiness.

Infact it was former Bhutan King Jigme Singye Wangchuck who had coined the term “Gross National Happiness”.

France’s former President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2008 had commission­ed the economists Joseph E. Stiglitz, Amartya Sen and Jean- Paul Fitoussi to write a report investigat­ing the usefulness of happiness in developmen­t indexes. Mr Sarkozy had said that government­s should do away with the “religion of statistics” in which financial prowess was the sole indicator of a country’s state of health.

In 2011, the United Nations General Assembly passed a resolution inviting member states to consider measures that could better capture the “pursuit of happiness” in developmen­t.

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