I am honored
by this invitation to participate in this important Conference. The
world has come to expect leadership from Canada in so many areas,
from advancing the theory and methodologies for measuring sustainable
development to Canadas key role in the United Nations. The "Ottawa
Process" gave the world its first Treaty on Land Mines and Canada
innovated the worlds first global public access television/internet
network, WETV, to promote multicultural, grassroots approaches to
sustainable development. As many here are aware, WETV in its new
TV series, "The Ethical Marketplace" [1] will be covering
the growing field of clean, green investing, sustainable businesses,
and all the new corporate performance ratings, ethical and triple-bottom-line
auditing, as well as the range of new sustainability indicators at
work around the world the topic of our conference today.
The Calvert-Henderson
Quality of Life Indicators (C-HQLI) are for me,
the fulfillment of 25 years of effort, research and advocacy
in the USA and worldwide for more comprehensive statistics
beyond the traditional macroeconomic indicators, GNP/GDP based
on the United Nations System of National Accounts (UNSNA).
The proliferation of alternative measures of sustainable human
development and quality-of-life, attest to tremendous progress
in the past decade. The UNDPs first Human Development
Index (HDI) in 1990 devised by my two respected colleagues,
the late Mahbub ul Haq and UNDPs current Director of
Development Studies, Inge Kaul, gave all our efforts great
impetus. In 1989, I contributed (along with Mahbub ul Haq,
Lord Meghnad Desai, Dharam Ghai, Frank Bracho, Victor Anderson
and other indicators experts) to The Caracas Report to the
South Commission New Ways to Measure Development (Institute
for Advanced Study, Caracas, Venezuela, 1989, English version
1990, Redefining Wealth and Progress, Toes Books,
NY).
After
many years of presenting and debating such expanded approaches to
national accounts with government and academic colleagues at venues
worldwide, I found a "fit" with the research needs of a
leading, innovative socially responsible investment firm located
in the United States, The Calvert Group of Bethesda, MD, which has
been in the mutual fund management business for 25 years and manages
approximately $7.0 billion in assets in 27 screened and non-screened
portfolios for over 220,000 shareholders. I have served since 1982
on the Calvert Social Investment Fund Advisory Council.
Calverts
responsible investment practices are based on the belief that caring
for our natural environment and recognizing the importance of human
dignity is essential to the long-term health and well-being of our
increasingly interdependent world. In the early 1980s, Calvert pioneered
the use of social investing on a broader scale than ever before.
In 1982, the Calvert Social Investment Fund became the first mutual
fund to oppose apartheid in South Africa. Fittingly, in 1994, following
Nelson Mandelas victory in the countrys first open elections,
Calvert became one of the first mutual funds to re-invest in a free
South Africa. Calvert recognizes that investing in companies that
are committed to meeting the challenges of the future with an expanded
view of corporate responsibility is more than just a matter of "doing
the right thing" it also makes good business sense. Calvert
embraces the concept that a primary objective of every corporation
should be to enhance the wealth of all stakeholders, not just the
companys shareholders, but also its employees, customers, vendors,
communities, and the natural environment. More than $2 trillion is
invested today in the United States in a socially responsible manner,
according to a study released in 1999 by the US nonprofit Social
Investment Forum.
The Calvert-Henderson
Quality of Life Indicators project was launched
in 1994 with Calverts Social Investment Research Department,
directed by Jon Lickerman. Why does a private sector financial
firm publish such a set of indicators of quality-of-life? I
will quote directly from Calvert Groups CEO, Barbara
Krumsiek,
"All
over the country, citizens are demonstrating a desire to engage
in serious discussions about how to measure quality of life
and livable communities in the United States. For the past
five years, Calvert Group has been preparing for this exciting
debate. We are pleased to release in this initial volume the
Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators, the first national,
comprehensive assessment of the quality of life in the United
States using a systems approach. The deep insights, illuminating
findings, and bold explorations into historical and contemporary
environmental, economic and social conditions of the country
are our contributions to this important debate. We hope its
messages and many lessons will empower people from all walks
of life who are equally concerned about our future together
on this planet." [2]
Beyond this
social mission of educating investors and the general public, I will
quote our projects
co-director, Jon Lickerman,
"Over the course
of our practice in socially responsible investing, it became
evident that there were no broad indicators by which to guide
our unique investment strategy. Yes, our managers had traditional
economic indicators to help guide their financial investment
decisions. Routine releases of the Consumer Price Index, housing
starts, consumer credit, manufacturing orders and capacity
utilization, job vacancies, growth in average earnings, productivity,
and unit labor costs all provide information to navigate the
direction of economic cycles and investment strategies.
As a leading practitioner
in the field of socially responsible investing, Calvert analysts
did not have tools similar to those available to traditional
investment professionals. We understood the need for a broader
array of socio-economic indicators. We also began to understand
that there was little information available to understand the
relationships between economic forces and societal or environmental
impacts. This dilemma led Calvert into the field of quality
of life indicators. How was it that we could analyze the environmental
impact of a major chemical company, yet we could not ascertain
the overall quality of the environment in which it operates?
In the fast food industry, analysts had no indicators that
would elucidate how further investments in an inherently low
wage industry might impact broader socio-economic trends. What
were the trends in national income distribution? What were
the demographics of this traditionally low wage segment of
the workforce? Was this growth industry contributing to increased
national income disparities or simply providing a low rung
step in the ladder of economic development for workers?"[3]
Indeed, Calvert
Group frequently finds it necessary to undertake such broader, quality-of-life
research on issues of emerging concerns to their shareholders and
society, for example, privacy, biotechnology and genetic engineering,
impacts of commercialism and mass media on children. Similarly, the
screening process (both positive and negative) of corporations for
inclusion in Calverts mutual fund portfolios is constantly refined. For
example, Calvert does not invest in companies that are involved in
weapons production, nuclear energy, or out of compliance with environmental
regulations, core labor standards or those involved in human rights
violations or disputes with indigenous people. Calverts "positive
screens" seek innovative companies that create social benefits,
environmental remediation and are geared toward sustainable use of
energy and resources. Indeed, as Calverts Social Research Department
has broadened its research since Calvert Groups founding 25-years
ago, this huge knowledge base is increasingly sought after by outside
entities including traditional financial firms, and increasingly,
academia, government agencies, public officials and Civic Society
Organizations (CSOs).
The Calvert-Henderson
Quality of Life Indicators measure conditions and trends in 12 key
socioeconomic sectors of the U.S.A. (See
Figure 1) based on my Country Futures Indicators (CFI) model
(Henderson, 1991, 1995), co-created by this author and the Calvert
Group, Inc., Bethesda, MD.[4] These Indicators were developed
over five years under the guidance of Hazel Henderson, Jon Lickerman
and Patrice Flynn, President, Flynn Research, Harpers Ferry, WV,
and a team of experts in each of the 12 Indicator domains: Education,
Jill Dianne Swenson; Employment, Patrice Flynn; Energy,
John A. "Skip" Laitner; Environment, Kenneth P.
Scott; Health, Constance Battle and Mary Jenifer; Human
Rights, Alya Kayal; Income, Lawrence Mishel; Infrastructure,
Will Mallett; National Security, Colonel Daniel M. Smith; Public
Safety, Trudy A. Karlson; Re-Creation, Richard Peterson
and Carrie Lee; Shelter, Patrick Simmons. US population/demographic
data crosscuts through all 12 Indicators. Population increases show,
by most forecasts, a rise of between 8 and 10 billion people on our
planet early in this new millennium. However, the huge global gap
between rich and poor still shows that per capita consumption of
energy and resources in the US is some fifty times greater than that
of some 2 billion of the worlds poor and undernourished. Thus,
the most potent threat to the environment is waste and over consumption,
with the US as the worlds chief polluter. The other Indicators
show the potential for redesigning infrastructures, production methods
using better information and how "greener technologies" can
also benefit the worlds climate and ecologyas well as
quality-of-life.
The 12 indicators were selected
using many sources. Firstly, they are major areas of public concern
as reflected in public opinion polls, the media, political campaigns,
and debates over decades. Secondly, these domains are most often
covered in many of the existing sets of local state, national, and
international statistics we reviewed. Each one of our indicators
allow revealing insights often invisible in highly averaged indices.
In two separate polls on governmental reform by the highly respected
Americans Talk Issues Foundation, Americans were asked if they approved
or disapproved of the following proposal:
"In the same way weve
developed and used the Gross National Product to measure the
growth of the economy, [we should] develop and use a scorecard
of new indicators for holding politicians responsible for progress
toward other national goals, like improving education, extending
health care, preserving the environment, and making the military
meet todays needs."
In these two surveys in March
of 1993, 72 percent of the American people agree that such quality-of-life
indicators were needed. These results were verified in a debate format
where an opposing view was offered in the second survey in January
of 1994:
"Opponents say that
eventually economists will be able to calculate a single indicator
of progress, a kind of enlarged GNP, that bundles into this money-based
statistic our progress in all major areas including the economy,
health, education, the environment, and so forth. This single
number would be easier for everyone to use to rank ourselves
against other nations and to judge the performance of our political
leaders."
Only 22 percent of respondents
found this opposing view to be convincing, and when the original
question was asked again, support went up to 79 percent (Kay 1998).[5]
The Calvert-Henderson model
presents the first systems approach to measuring quality-of-life
(see Kenneth C. Land, SINET News, Feb-May 2000). The Indicators are
unbundled for full transparency and public education, but are conceptually
linked and interfaced in the overall model. Each Indicator domain
is mapped by a sub-system model describing the relationships between
institutional structures and how decisions flow through the sector
to create outcomes (measured by the most reliable, official and academic
statistics). (For example, see Figure 2, Calvert-Henderson National
Security Model, and Figure 3, Calvert-Henderson Shelter model.)
Each Indicator domain uses appropriate metrics and disciplines for
its data-streams. Baseline evaluations of existing statistics and
methods identify their changing relevance to each evolving socioeconomic
sector and highlight statistical "blind spots."
The use of macroeconomic aggregation
and weighting formulae is deliberately avoided, so as to minimize
distortion and opacity. This systems methodology serves both the
purposes of public education and the needs of asset managers in constructing
socially-responsible portfolios according to social criteria and
performance of companies in all of the 12 Indicator domains. Currently,
all major data-streams are being updated, and will be available online,
mid year, 2001. An important goal is to help improve the quality
and breadth of existing national statistics.
The Calvert-Henderson
Quality of Life Indicators provide "the rest of the story" on the
USA, its rapidly-evolving economy and technological sectors. Statisticians
are reformulating GNP to reflect these new realities in re-categorizing
software and many other services, which together now represent the
largest sector of our "Information Age" economy. All the
worlds industrializing societies are undergoing similar changes
and restructuring, as they move from the earlier to the later stages
of the Industrial Revolution. Part of this great transition is toward
information-based economies. Here, knowledge, intellectual capital
and the more intangible human and social assets replace manual labor
and some of the tangible capital earlier economic textbooks called
the "factors of production."
My own model
of sustainable development sees the process as the evolution of human
societies understanding
of three basic resources: matter, energy and information (See
Figure 4, Models of Resource Use). Thus, societies key
resource is information and the extent to which its culture educates
and nurtures its human and social capital, and applies its knowledge
base to managing its material and energy resources. An example is
the evolution of fossil-fuel technologies since 1850 from solids
and liquids to gases. (See Figure 5, The Shape of Things to Come).
This
transition to information-based production and services is often
accompanied by a deeper knowledge of natural processes and ecological
assets and the services nature provides. Thus, many economies have
also evolved toward more efficient use of energy and materialsand
a shift away from fossil fuels and nuclear power (which create pollution
and safety hazards). As we learn more about our living planet and
natures productivity and design genius, our technologies change.
They slowly reflect this new knowledge in biotechnologies and the
harnessing of clean, inexhaustible sources of energy (from sun, wind,
oceans, and biomass). With appropriate full-cost prices and regulations,
societies slowly shift to recycling industrial materials in closed-loop
production, waste reduction, re-manufacturing and reuse. An industrial
design revolution is quietly under way toward more "weightless," dematerialized
economies.
It
is well-recognized that macroeconomic statistics fell behind in mapping
these fundamental shifts. A large part of the problem is that conventional
economics and accounting still considers air, water, and natures purifying
cycles "free." Thus, only recently have textbooks begun
to embrace full-cost prices. Only in the past decade have we seen
the rise of environmental and ecological economics, full-cost accounting,
and life-cycle costing for investment purposes. All this, together
with the rise of social and environmental auditing, accounting for "intangibles" and
intellectual propertyand the many attempts to overhaul GNP
and GDPrepresents the greatest revolution in accounting and
statistics since the invention of double-entry bookkeeping. Calvert
and this author support the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) to
extend company auditing to measure a triple-bottom-line. (See
Figure 6, CERES Reporting Initiative).
As
you are aware, Economists K. W. Kapp, Kenneth Boulding, Barbara Ward,
E. J. Mishan, and E. F. Schumacher, in Europe, spearheaded these
new approaches, as well as Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen and his student
Herman Daly, Richard Estes, and others in the US, including this
author. On the conceptual foundations of these early economics innovators,
a host of new efforts to redefine human development, wealth, and
progress emerged in the 1980s and 1990s. David Morris of the Institute
for Local Self-Reliance produced the Physical Quality-of-Life Index
(PQLI) for the Overseas Development Council; this author promulgated
the Country Futures Indicators (CFI) approach in 1986. Herman Daly
and John Cobb created the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
with Clifford Cobb in 1989. This index deducts from GNP many environmental
and social costs, arriving at a significantly lower "net GNP." This
index has been adapted widely in Europe, Australia, and the US as
the Genuine Progress Index (GPI) since 1995. Other approaches include
the Fordham University Index of Social Health devised by Marque Luisa
and Marc Miringoff.[6]
The
Clinton Administration attempted to "green" the US GDP by means
of an Integrated Environmental and Economic Satellite Account (IEESA)
developed by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) of the US Commerce
Department in 1994to mixed reviews. The Congress directed the
BEA to halt this work, and charged the National Research Council
to review the entire issue. In late 1999, the Council issued its
report, Natures Numbers, urging that the BEA be funded
to restart this effort. The World Bank in 1995 issued its own Wealth
Index, which redefined "the wealth of nations" in significant
ways. The Bank now defines 60% of this wealth of nations as "human
capital" (social organization and human skills and knowledge),
20% as environmental capital (natures contribution), and 20%
as "built capital" (factories, finance capital). A revolution
has begun in the economics profession, with many of its best mindsJoseph
Stiglitz, formerly the Banks chief economist, Harvards
Jeffrey Sachs and Paul Krugmanembracing pieces of the new thinking.
The most influential, widely used and quoted new formula is the United
Nations Human Development Index (HDI), which has spawned many national
versions.
The
most pressing methodological debate over such new measures of wealth
progress and human development has concerned the extent to which
such broad new areas of concern as human rights, health, education,
environmental and overall quality of life can be captured using money
coefficients and macroeconomic models. Such methods currently weight
all data from different economic sectors into one index. Many, including
this author, believe that such high levels of aggregating all these "apples
and oranges" into one index is inappropriate and often confusing.
Another issue concerns the use of "satellite accounts" for
environmental and social data. This designation indicates lesser
value for such data. Such diverse areas of quality-of-life deserve
their own metricsthose most appropriate within the diverse
disciplines that study such fields. For example, money coefficients
cannot quantify human rights, air and water quality, recreational
satisfaction, education, health, public safety, or national security.
Money measures and percentages of national budgets can give cluesbut
are often simply input datarather than measuring outcomes and
results.
The
systems approach used in the CHQLI requires multiple metrics to cover
the 12 aspects of US society. In each area, a model links all major
factors and processes, providing a roadmap of how decisions flow
through various institutional structures to create outcomes. Such
systemic models help identify why in each area, the US has succeeded
or fallen short in achieving its stated policy goals. Many Indicator
areas show how throwing money at ill-defined problems such as "crime" or "national
security" or at specific diseases, has led to wasted or misdirected
resources, both public and private. These Indicators show how each
sector of the US economy contributed to, or in some cases, diminished
overall quality-of-life. The "holes" in the statistical
pictures and where data-gathering needs new focus are identified.
These 12 "unbundled" Indicators with the use of visual
models come together as a broader pattern. This systems approach
allows display of this wealth of diverse data rigorouslywithout
the loss of detail which plagues any single Index approach. This
systems and visual approach will be emphasized in the forthcoming
website, which will allow easy access to the underlying data in each
Indicator model. Each Indicator is summarized below.
Employment
The
field of US employment and work changed immensely during the 1990s.
From a recession in the early 1990s, the US in 2000 had the lowest
(4.2%) unemployment recorded since the 1950s. This has caused a rethink
of the NAIRU used by the Federal Reserve Board in setting interest
rates. A NAIRU under 5.5% was thought to be inflationary. Today,
the US economy is running at higher levels of employment without
this expected rise in inflationdue, many say, to the "New
Economy" factors. In spite of the bursting of the bubble on
Wall Street, the Internet and information technology, arguably
has raised overall US productivity. The Employment Indicator model
also shows that a large but not well-measured percentage of productive
work is unpaid. This unpaid work in caring for elders, the sick
and childrenin home or volunteer organization settingsis
unaccounted for in the GNP. Many organizations in the nonprofit,
civic sector of US society now call for full recognition of the
value of this caring work. Some call for housework and parenting
to be paid, through statutory pension benefits or in marriage contracts.
This area of concern will likely grow as both parents in families
are in the paid workforce. The "family values" debate
encodes many new dilemmas faced by parents as they juggle two jobs,
child and elder care as U.S. population ages. Worldwide, the United
Nations HDI in 1995 estimated that unpaid work by the worlds
women was worth US$11 trillion and that by men another US$5 trillion.
This US$16 trillion total was simply missing from the 1995 world
GDP of US$24 trillion. In addition, this Indicator tracks the growing
ranks of the self-employed, part-timers and the composition by
gender, ethnicity, and age of the US workforce. The promise of
the Industrial Age for more leisureas machines and automation
took over production tasksdid not materialize. Today, Americans
work longer hours than their counterparts in Europe and Japan.
Yet, there is much debate over the statistics on work and leisure,
as cross-referenced in the Indicator on Re-Creation.
Income
This
Indicator dissects conventional macrostatistics to reveal important
information concealed by the averages. Although US incomes at the
low end have been essentially flat for over a decade, there were
signs of increase due to the "New Economy" phenomenon in 2000. The 2001
bear market on Wall Street and softening US economy, has, so far,
resulted in little increase in unemployment. Yet the gap between
rich and poor Americans is still historically highan issue
that does not bode well for any democracy. Other measurement issues
include the extent to which technology and globalization are squeezing
the incomes of less skilled Americans and are related to the Employment
and Education Indicators. A 1995 national survey by the Merck Foundation
and the Harwood Group found 28% of Americans had opted for lower incomes
and moved to rural communities in order to improve their
quality of life. Clearly, values are changing and new trade-offs
are being made between more money income vis-à-vis more
time, tranquil and less-polluted environmentsall made possible
by home computers and the Internet. As official statistical cameras
are re-focused, the Income Indicator will add new data-streams.
Shelter
This
Indicator dissects US macroeconomic data to reveal a "good news, bad
news" picture. The American Dream of home ownership has never
been so fulfilledwith a record 66.3% now owning homes. A
majority of Americans are well housed with over two-thirds in affordable,
physically adequate, uncrowded housing. The bad news is that shelter
deprivation still exists in spite of the US economic expansion.
Some 5.3 million low-income renters are in distress and an additional
half to three-quarters of a million Americans are homeless at any
given time. These statistics seem to be a reflection of the national
poverty gapshown in the Income Indicator. The state of shelter
in the US also affects opportunities for social mobility and education
and thus is related to many other Indicators, including those on
Employment, Health, and Environment.
Infrastructure
This
Indicator unpacks macrostatistics to reveal an ongoing debate: to
what extent the US has been overlooking the vital role its infrastructure
plays in undergirding its economy. Historically, infrastructure referred
to highways, railroads, harbors, bridges, aqueducts, public buildings,
dams, and the like. Industrial societies evolved airports, communications
systems, energy supplies, water, and other utilities. Today, infrastructure
includes education, research and development, computerized "backbone" systems,
and all taxpayer-supported systems used in commerce and on which
large sectors of any economy rely. A recent trend, picked up by
this Indicator, is that of the privatization of growing areas of
formerly publicly-owned infrastructure, including electric utilities,
phone, water, and other services. After the 2001 electricity blackouts
in California, a re-evaluation of deregulation of such vital infrastructure
is underway. Such publicly funded investments used to be "expensed" items
in GDP accounts. As of 1996, a more realistic asset budget in GNP
now accounts for such investments as "assets"since
they often have a useful lifetime of 50100 years or more.
This accounting change has contributed to the US budget surplus.
Canada changed its GNP to include such public investments as assets
in 1999, thereby reducing its deficit by Can$50 billion. Japan
could much improve its prospects by adopting such budgeting reformsas
could European Union countries. This Indicator is related to most
other Indicators, as infrastructure is the key to energy efficiency,
whether cities sprawl over virgin lands and farms or whether older
or vacant land in our cities is infilled. These factors in turn
relate to environmental protection, pollution, housing, education,
public health and safety.
Energy
This
Indicator is a key to the overall efficiency of an economy. US GNP
has been growing with less energy input in the past 25 years, since
the first Organization of Oil Exporting Countries (OPEC) oil embargo
in 1973. But the US still lags behind Japan and Europeusing
almost twice the energy they use per unit of GNP. This puts the
US in an uncompetitive position and worsens Californias electricity
crisiseven as the Internet-based "New Economy" grows.
US reliance on low-fuel-efficiency cars and fossil fuels decreases
national flexibility. Entrenched sectors of the older industrial
economy oppose the shift to new energy sources, cleaner fuel cell
or electric cars. All these issues of restructuring the US economy
came to a head in the debate over climate change. The fossil fuel
industry lobbied hard and spent millions on advertising campaigns
to oppose the 1997 Kyoto Agreements to reduce fossil fuel carbon
emissions. Yet the scientific evidence now overwhelmingly points
to the need to reduce such emissions. Many analysts, including
Amory Lovins of the Rocky Mountain Institute, Colorado, believe
that the fossil-industrial transition to the Information Age will
usher in a prosperous, profitable economy based on renewable resource
use and deeper knowledge. Thus energy efficiency can mean less
waste, higher, cleaner profits, more comfortable homes, communities
and travel with less pollution. The transition from here to there
can be followed in this Indicator, as traditional economic models
of "efficiency" move into alignment with physical realities
of thermodynamic efficiency.
National Security
The
US publics
view of "national security" has been changing for over
a decade, as revealed, for example, in Americans Talk Issues Foundation
surveys and those from the University of Marylands Center
on Public Policy Attitudes. Even before the end of the Cold War,
the US public was identifying global economic competitiveness and
environmental pollution as issues of national securitybeyond
traditional military views of "defense." The National
Security Indicator model reveals how Americans, the Congress, the
Administration, and a host of institutional players actually shape
our current national security policy. This identifies other potential
lags in the military view of national security. These relate to
prevention of threats and conflicts. These must be addressed via
intelligence, diplomacy, treaty-making, surveillance, and verificationmost
often involving allies and multilateral agencies including the
United Nations (the only global organization of countries that
can convene all the parties). Short-changing such anticipatory,
preventive policies inevitably leads to more drastic, expensive
military interventionssuch as those that might have been
prevented in Bosnia, Kosovo, East Timor, and other trouble spots.
Yet the Indicator shows a growing imbalance between military strategies
and programs against an alarming drop-off in preventive activitiesincluding
deteriorating US Embassy facilities, cuts to State Department diplomatic
activities, pull-backs from international peacekeeping and surveillance
operations with US allies and the United Nations and the continuing
US arrears in paying UN dues. The public debate about a "new
isolationism," the changing meaning of "national sovereignty" and
globalization will continue for years to come. The national security
is fundamentally linked to all other areas and Indicators of any
nations quality of life.
Health
The
Health Indicator begins by exploring why the US provides more health-care
services at higher costs per capita than any other country in the
world. This enormous sector of the economy is becoming a top focus
of national concernsince it delivers only modest improvements
in health status in some areas and none in others. Almost 50 million
Americans have no health insurance and many demand a "patients
Bill of Rights" to hold health maintenance organizations (HMOs)
and insurance companies more accountable for decisions over patient
treatment was supported by both presidential candidates in 2000.
The Indicator offers a model of the current US healthcare system,
which helps to clarify a systemic set of issues. Health is being
redefined beyond the medical intervention model. Today, Americans
are focusing on prevention, stress-reduction, and lifestyle choices.
Tobacco and alcohol use, and even the availability of guns, are
issues entering the public health debate. More Americans now consult "complementary" and "alternative" health
providers than visit conventional medical doctors and facilities.
This is a paradigm shift, which is restructuring the entire medicalindustrial
complex and its technocratic, bureaucratic approach, which represents
some 14% of US GNP. New statistics are needed as the US integrates
these two very different approaches to health. An October 1999
study in the Federal Reserve Bank of New Yorks Economic
Policy Review cites the effects of urban poverty. Fifteen-year-old
black and white males life expectancy rates were compared
in several cities. In poor black areas of New York City only 37%
were expected to live to age 65. In Detroit, the figure was 50%.
Poor white 15-year-olds in poverty areas of Detroit and Cleveland
did a little better. In Detroit, 60% were found likely to live
to age 65 with 64% likely in Cleveland. Average life expectancy
for all US whites is 77 years and for US blacks 62 years. The Indicator
shows such gaps, which also relate to similar data in the Income,
Shelter, Safety, Education, and Human Rights Indicators.
Education
The
Education Indicator model gives an overview of US issues over structural
educational reform, school vouchers, "charter" schools,
home schooling, and those concerning the shift to todays
globalized information-based economy. Knowledge is now widely recognized
as a key factor of production. The World Bank and other multilateral
institutions now agree that investments in education (particularly
at preschool and kindergarten through 12 levels) are the new key,
along with investments in health, to economic development. Statistics,
particularly in macroeconomic indices, are lagging far behind this
new paradigm of economic and human development. Nothing
is changing US business and academic institutions faster than the
new definitions of capitalas human and intellectual capital.
As many new Internet-based e-commerce businesses know, a company
cannot "own" the part of its knowledge base that resides
in the heads of its employees. The rise of stock options, partnerships,
and employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) are all related to this
new evaluation of intellectual capitalon which all technical
and social innovation is based. Today, more than ever, education
is a basic human rightin many other countries as well as
in the US. Furthermore, levels of education will drive all the
worlds economies toward developmentdepending how they
structure and invest in educating humanitys most precious
resource: the worlds children.
Public Safety
This
Indicator maps a rapid evolution in the US debate about this aspect
of quality-of-life. The view that safety was a personal affair and
that risk-taking was a private choice has evolved as society became
more complex. While individuals are still largely responsible for
their behavior, today we live in an interdependent world. Many risks
of daily life (for example, exposure to toxic wastes, gun violence
in schools, car and highway design, risks in foods and other products)
are involuntary and often unavoidable. Thus the Indicator also captures
these new concerns in public safetyand links todays
risks to health, education, and cultural factors. Crime statistics
in the model and the tragedies of US gun violence are seen in this
larger setting. This systemic view provides insights for individual
and corporate risk-reduction and may help rethink views on improving
public safety, and its measurements.
Human Rights
This
Indicator views the state of human rights in the US in broad areas:
fundamental rights to the security of person; the US Bill of Rights
and Amendments to the Constitution (including freedom of expression,
religious freedom, right of assembly; voting rights). Beyond these
basic rights, the model embraces an evolving international view embodied
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which the US signed
along with many other countries over fifty years ago. The Indicator
covers US incarceration data (among the highest in the world),
the death penalty, prison labor, racial/gender discrimination,
mistreatment of prisoners and aliens, as well as voting rights,
participation in politics and the growing influence of money and
special interests. Today, human rights have become a keystone of
US foreign policylargely due to the efforts of former President
Jimmy Carter. A crucial issue is to what extent the sovereignty
of a nation is no longer absolute in cases where despotic dictators
violate the human rights of their own citizens. Such clashes were
evident in the cases of Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, and more recently
in the breakaway Russian province of Chechnya. These and other
human rights issues are also of great concern in other countries.
In Europe, Japan, Canada and many other countries, economic, cultural,
and social rights (to education, social participation, health care
and leisure time and to social security) are included. Another
evolution concerns the embracing of women and children in the definition
of human rightsnow widely recognizedif not fully achieved.
This Indicator is crucial to quality-of-life in the US and worldwide.
Environment
This
Indicator seeks to embrace the interactions between human society,
economic processes, and humanitys life support systems: the natural
world, its resources and other species. Naturally, such a task
is too enormous to do more than find within the model some key "surrogate" indicators
as proxies for such a vast area. The burgeoning field of environmental
indicators and sustainability criteria area drawn upon, including
data on planetary ecosystems, the crucial role of biodiversity,
human effects on the ozone layer and climate. The Environment Indicator
model recognizes these broad concerns, but pays attention to indicators
closest to the lives of most US citizens. Air and water quality
and attainment of EPA standards are the initial focus, since people
cannot survive without acceptable quality air and water. The National
Research Councils 1999 report, Natures Numbers,
also notes that "Greater emphasis should be placed on measuring
actual human exposures to air and water pollution" (Recommendations
4.3 and 5.9). Through these lenses one can understand better the
causes of their degradation and pollutionand the many steps
needed to reverse these threats. The systems approach reveals that
many other domains of quality-of-life, infrastructure design, energy
use, shelter, health, employment, public safety, and national security
all impinge on the environment and life support systemsfor
better or worse.
Re-Creation
This
Indicator goes beyond the material aspects of the US and focuses
on how Americans re-create themselves. The Indicator maps extraordinarily
diverse forms of recreation in the USfrom volunteering in community
projects to helping preserve wildlife and serving the poor, to
attending concerts, museums, or enjoying bowling, hunting, and
fishing. The model traces how the US organizes and spends private
and public resources on such recreational activities. The Indicator
embraces self-improving experience (from religious, spiritual pursuits
to other forms of self-development), patronizing the arts, physical
sports and fitness; do-it-yourself crafts, gardening, home-improvement,
hobbies, vicarious experience (TV, video games, Internet), socializing
and home entertaining, travel and tourism (now the worlds
biggest industry) to games of chance, betting, and chemical escape
(alcohol, tobacco, and drugs). This Indicator offers a panorama
of these evolving activities of US inhabitants, which together
form the largest and fastest-growing sector of the USs services-dominated
economy. Statistical and methodological debates abound on the size
and shape of this emerging "Attention Economy" (Henderson,
1996) and its implications concerning work and leisure time. The
rapid evolution of the entire field of self-development and re-creation
augurs additional social and political change. Todays drive
for self-developmentan essentially spiritual needis
now spilling over into US material livesin the growth of
socially responsible investments, and in communities opting to
honor their local past and culture by building museums and art
galleries. Over 80 million Americans volunteer at least 5 hours
a week to their communities and the nonprofit, voluntary sector
now stands at 7% of GNP. A poll cited in Business Week (November
1, 1999) found that 78% of Americans say that they feel the need
in their lives to experience spiritual growthup from 20%
in 1994. The Re-creation Indicator will track such changes. As
more governments and research groups in the private and civic sectors
promulgate such reforms in national accounts and macroeconomic
statistics, corporations and national policies can be steered toward
protecting life support systems and more equitable, transparent,
and sustainable societies.
The
C-HQLI will be continually reviewed, updated and reformulated as
US society restructures and evolves. We hope to benefit from expert
feedback from the academic community, government agencies and statisticians new
measurements in all of our 12 Indicator domains. The initial responses
from all sectors have been favorable and the many comments suggest
that the C-HQLI is being used widely as a public information and
policy tool particularly at state and local levels. Our
decision not to release any regular media-friendly single number
analogs to GDP releases was taken to prevent distortion and maintain
a systemic, holistic view. Meanwhile, we continue to present C-HQLI
at numerous professional and academic conferences in the USA, Europe,
Latin America and Asia, as well as in UNESCOs forthcoming
Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems.
****
End Notes:
[1]Information
on The Ethical Marketplace series is available from
WETV, 342 MacLaren Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K2P 0M6 or
wetv.com.
[2] The
Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators: A New Tool for Assessing
National Trends, eds. Hazel Henderson, Jon Lickerman, Patrice Flynn,
Calvert Group, Inc., Bethesda, MD, 2000, p1.
[3]ibid.,
p.17, Reference manual for the Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life
Indicators is available at this Conference or from Amazon.com;
hazelhenderson.com or from the Calvert Group, P.O. Box 30348, Bethesda,
MD 20814; paperback US$25.00
includes postage.
[4]The Calvert
Groups Jon Lickerman can be contacted at www.calvert.com. Hazel Henderson is at www.hazelhenderson.com and Patrice
Flynn, whose firm is under contract to update the Indicators and to construct
the website is at www.flynnresearch.com.
[5]Kay,
Alan F., Locating Consensus for Democracy, Americans Talk
Issues Foundation, St. Augustine, FL (1998).
[6]See for
example, CHALLENGE, Henderson H., Whats New In the
Great Debate About Wealth and Progress, M.E. Sharpe, New York,
Dec. 1996.