Sammyboy RSS Feed
03-04-2014, 12:40 PM
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:
Why Singapore not in the survey?
Will Singapore be Number 1 instead, if it's in the survey?
LONDON (REUTERS) - New Zealand came first in a global index published on Thursday that ranks countries by social and environmental performance rather than economic output in a drive to make social progress a priority for politicians and businesses.
The Social Progress Index (SPI) rates 132 countries on more than 50 indicators, including health, sanitation, shelter, personal safety, access to information, sustainability, tolerance and inclusion and access to education.
The SPI asks questions such as whether a country can satisfy its people's basic needs and whether it has the infrastructure and capacity to allow its citizens to improve the quality of their lives and reach their full potential.
"The index shows that economic growth does not automatically lead to social progress," Michael Green, executive director of the Social Progress Imperative, a non-profit organisation that publishes the index, told Thomson Reuters Foundation
http://www.socialprogressimperative.org/data/spi
Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com (http://sammyboy.com/showthread.php?178633-New-Zealand-tops-social-progress-index-world-s-biggest-economies-trail&goto=newpost).
Why Singapore not in the survey?
Will Singapore be Number 1 instead, if it's in the survey?
LONDON (REUTERS) - New Zealand came first in a global index published on Thursday that ranks countries by social and environmental performance rather than economic output in a drive to make social progress a priority for politicians and businesses.
The Social Progress Index (SPI) rates 132 countries on more than 50 indicators, including health, sanitation, shelter, personal safety, access to information, sustainability, tolerance and inclusion and access to education.
The SPI asks questions such as whether a country can satisfy its people's basic needs and whether it has the infrastructure and capacity to allow its citizens to improve the quality of their lives and reach their full potential.
"The index shows that economic growth does not automatically lead to social progress," Michael Green, executive director of the Social Progress Imperative, a non-profit organisation that publishes the index, told Thomson Reuters Foundation
http://www.socialprogressimperative.org/data/spi
Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com (http://sammyboy.com/showthread.php?178633-New-Zealand-tops-social-progress-index-world-s-biggest-economies-trail&goto=newpost).