The British government wants to find out what makes people happy.
Righteous Kill
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Is it good health, education, income, or job satisfaction? Is it the environment, a lack of crime, or having a say in politics?
Those aspects of life can't be measured by the gross domestic product (GDP), long used as a key indicator of a nation's prosperity, British Prime Minister David Cameron says.
Thursday, he launched a national survey to ask people which aspects matter most to them, and which they believe should be used to measure the nation's well-being.
Though Cameron has championed this initiative since at least 2006, when he was still leader of the opposition -- suggesting a focus on GWB, or "general well-being" -- he still defended the idea Thursday against suspicions "that all this is a bit airy-fairy and impractical."
"Of course you can't capture happiness on a spreadsheet any more than you can bottle it," he said in announcing the program. "If anyone was trying to reduce the whole spectrum of human emotion into one snapshot statistic, I would be the first to roll my eyes, but that isn't what this is about.