lunes, 11 de agosto de 2025

Rethinking Progress Through Wellbeing

In a pivotal gathering that transcended conventional metrics of national prosperity, the Wellbeing and Public Policy Conference convened a diverse spectrum of international academics, governmental strategists, and policy analysts to deliberate how the evolving science of wellbeing could reshape the architecture of public governance. Prompted by the influential Stiglitz Report, which challenged the sufficiency of GDP as a proxy for societal progress, the event hosted 45 in-depth papers traversing philosophical frameworks, measurement techniques, empirical insights, and practical policy applications. Central to the discourse were four keynote contributions: Andrew Clark dissected the Easterlin paradox, exploring how income comparisons distort the relationship between wealth and happiness; Robert Cummins advanced the controversial set-point theory, suggesting individual wellbeing maintains a stable baseline; Paul Frijters interrogated the resilience of happiness in response to life’s adversities, offering evidence for psychological recovery and second chances; and Robert MacCulloch linked affective states to macroeconomic decisions, illustrating how emotions like contentment and anxiety can influence fiscal policy. A rich tapestry of presentations examined pressing themes such as children’s wellbeing, intergenerational poverty, gendered impacts of labor participation, and regional deprivation, while also showcasing progressive frameworks like Gross National Happiness and the Oxfam Humankind Index as viable alternatives to monolithic economic indicators. Scholars underscored the inadequacy of one-dimensional statistics and called for multidimensional, culturally sensitive indicators capable of capturing lived realities and informing equitable resource distribution. Particularly urgent was the call to integrate the perspectives of children, disabled populations, and marginalized groups, often excluded from standard wellbeing metrics. Operationally, institutions like the New Zealand and Australian Treasuries unveiled emerging wellbeing frameworks designed to embed subjective wellbeing into decision-making processes, marking a shift toward proactive, human-centered policy. The conference crystallized a growing consensus: that wellbeing should not be a secondary outcome of economic activity, but rather the explicit goal of modern governance. In conclusion, the event catalyzed a broader movement toward embedding empathy, equity, and evidence at the core of public policy, advancing a paradigm in which human flourishing supplants profit as the ultimate measure of progress.



Morrison, P.S. & Weijers, D., 2012. Wellbeing and Public Policy Conference: A Report on the June 2012 Conference in Wellington, New Zealand.