Centro de Documentación
Repositorio de publicaciones de referencia y de interés para la sustentabilidad ambiental del desarrollo |
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2011

OCDE,
How’s Life?: Measuring well-being Libro
OCDE, 2011, ISBN: 978-92-64-12116-4.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: bienestar, Economía, Educación, equidad, futuro, ingreso, OCDE, PNB, salud, vivienda
@book{OCDE2011,
title = { How's Life?: Measuring well-being},
author = {OCDE},
editor = {OCDE},
url = {/publicaciones/OECD/2011_Measuring.Welbeing_oecd.pdf},
isbn = { 978-92-64-12116-4},
year = {2011},
date = {2011-06-06},
booktitle = { How's Life?: Measuring well-being},
pages = {286},
publisher = {OCDE},
abstract = {This is a very special year for the OECD, as we are celebrating our 50th Anniversary. Reaching 50 is an important moment in everyone’s life: you take stock of what you have achieved, you think of where you want to go next. Thinking about the future is all the more important as we are still in the aftermath of the most devastating crisis that the global economy has experienced since World War II. The hesitant recovery, high joblessness, unprecedented volatility of financial markets, and public debts that have reached levels never experienced before, make us think twice when defining the necessary policy responses in the long-run.
In this challenging environment, we are committed more than ever to our founding mission to foster economic prosperity, improve development perspectives and the wellbeing of our citizens. This means putting the people in the centre of economic, social and environmental policies. In short: better policies for better lives.
Better policies need to be based on sound evidence and a broad focus: Not only on people’s income and financial conditions, but also on their health, their competencies, on the quality of the environment, where they live and work, their overall life satisfaction. Not only on the total amount of the goods and services, but also on equality and the conditions of those at the bottom of the ladder. Not only on the conditions “here and now” but also those in other parts of the world and those that are likely to prevail in the future. In summary, we need to focus on well-being and progress.},
keywords = {bienestar, Economía, Educación, equidad, futuro, ingreso, OCDE, PNB, salud, vivienda},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {book}
}
This is a very special year for the OECD, as we are celebrating our 50th Anniversary. Reaching 50 is an important moment in everyone’s life: you take stock of what you have achieved, you think of where you want to go next. Thinking about the future is all the more important as we are still in the aftermath of the most devastating crisis that the global economy has experienced since World War II. The hesitant recovery, high joblessness, unprecedented volatility of financial markets, and public debts that have reached levels never experienced before, make us think twice when defining the necessary policy responses in the long-run.
In this challenging environment, we are committed more than ever to our founding mission to foster economic prosperity, improve development perspectives and the wellbeing of our citizens. This means putting the people in the centre of economic, social and environmental policies. In short: better policies for better lives.
Better policies need to be based on sound evidence and a broad focus: Not only on people’s income and financial conditions, but also on their health, their competencies, on the quality of the environment, where they live and work, their overall life satisfaction. Not only on the total amount of the goods and services, but also on equality and the conditions of those at the bottom of the ladder. Not only on the conditions “here and now” but also those in other parts of the world and those that are likely to prevail in the future. In summary, we need to focus on well-being and progress.
In this challenging environment, we are committed more than ever to our founding mission to foster economic prosperity, improve development perspectives and the wellbeing of our citizens. This means putting the people in the centre of economic, social and environmental policies. In short: better policies for better lives.
Better policies need to be based on sound evidence and a broad focus: Not only on people’s income and financial conditions, but also on their health, their competencies, on the quality of the environment, where they live and work, their overall life satisfaction. Not only on the total amount of the goods and services, but also on equality and the conditions of those at the bottom of the ladder. Not only on the conditions “here and now” but also those in other parts of the world and those that are likely to prevail in the future. In summary, we need to focus on well-being and progress.
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