News

Social inequalities have an even greater impact on well-being than economic inequalities.

The SEDA report The Boston Consulting Group's Sustainable Economic Development Assessment highlights the importance of considering factors beyond GDP to get a more complete picture of government performance.

Madrid, 28 August 2019. High levels of social inequalities, as reflected in differences in access to health care and education, for example, are an even greater obstacle to a country's well-being than economic inequalities. This is the main conclusion of the 2019 edition of SEDA (Sustainable Economic Development Assessment), the annual assessment of sustainable economic development in more than 150 countries of the Boston Consulting Group.

Social inequalities receive less attention than economic inequalities in policymakers' discussions. However, BCG's SEDA 2019 analysis establishes a much stronger correlation between social equality and well-being than between economic equality and well-being. The analysis also shows that people in countries with relatively high levels of social equality tend to report relatively high levels of happiness.

"Today's governments face enormous challenges, the disruption created by rapid technological advances being one of them," says Joao Hrotko, BCG partner and co-author of the report. "These factors will change what is needed for public and private sector actors to succeed in the next decade. Governments, in particular, should aim to achieve a vision closer to the real concerns of their citizens to address potentially overlooked problems, such as social inequalities.

The power of a multidimensional control and actuation panel

The report also details how governments can obtain important signals, such as those related to social inequalities, through the development of a comprehensive monitoring and action framework. There has already been a great deal of momentum in countries such as New Zealand and the UK which, in moving beyond a focus on purely economic metrics such as GDP, have oriented policy and budgetary decisions around well-being. The next step may be to create a dashboard that assesses country performance more broadly. Such a monitoring framework should include in addition to economic metrics such as real GDP per capita growth, well-being metrics-objective metrics such as that represented by the SEDA indicator and subjective metrics such as indicators of happiness or life satisfaction.

BCG's report demonstrates how a three-dimensional dashboard can reveal problems that would be missed by using a single metric. Country scores in the UN's World Happiness Report, for example, tend to coincide with well-being, as reflected in a metric derived from SEDA: the wealth-to-well-being conversion ratio. But there are many countries with relatively high SEDA wealth and well-being scores that have lower than expected happiness indices. Only by studying the different metrics together can a country detect the worrying divergence and then begin to investigate what factors explain it.

"Governments that focus on a single metric, such as GDP, will miss important signals related to the problems their country needs to address," notes Enrique Rueda-Sabater, senior advisor at BCG and co-author of the report. "The three-dimensional dashboard we have developed will create a clear picture of where governments need to pay more attention to effectively impact the well-being of citizens.

 

The 2019 Sustainable Economic Development Assessment

Doubles on Scorched Earth

Situated at an intermediate yet uncertain (and apparently capricious) point between the parliamentary debate and the party rally, the television debates have been incrementing in multiples of two: two debates for the frontrunners, two debates for other candidates (for Barcelona, for example, on RTVE and TV3), the debates conventionally between...

The evolution of the brain

"The brain is the most fascinating object in the universe. Every human brain is different, the brain makes every human being unique and defines who he or she is." Stanley B. Prusiner (Nobel Prize in Medicine, 1997) Discoveries about the brain and how it works are of great interest to scientists and non-scientists alike....

How can we legally defend ourselves against fake news in COVID-19?

An unprecedented situation after COVID-19 What can be done if the company or one of its managers has been affected by false or inaccurate news in the wake of the coronavirus? How can the spread of false news that affects corporate reputation be remedied? What measures can be taken to prevent the spread of false news that affects corporate reputation? What...

The results of communicating brand purpose

The communication of brand purpose adds more than ever to the reputation of companies. In this context, Jaime Lobera, marketing and communication consultant, explains why he believes that companies that communicate brand purpose have better results in an interview conducted by Pilar Larrea, director...

Keys to the fall in oil consumption

The fall in olive oil consumption has to do with the fall in the consumption of all quality products, I would say in all areas of our society, of our culture. People are buying less, but it is not a question of price, it is a question of taste for healthy living. ....

The Keys to a Viable Pension System in the Future

The future infeasibility of the current public, contributory and pay-as-you-go pension system in Spain is one of the most urgent issues to be addressed by any government, but political expediency has meant that resolving it has been postponed time and again. The expert Diego Valero, President of the consulting firm...

More conversations, more ideas, more PROA.
Follow us on our networks.

Receive ideas with criteria

Every week we share reflections, trends and the key aspects of about reputation, strategic communication, public affairs and innovation. Content designed for professionals who value information with diligence and perspective.