Economic Resilience Is Built on Societal Well-Being
Governments need to look beyond traditional economic metrics like GDP to foster sustainable development and prepare for future crises. They can start by focusing on three priorities.
Explore BCG’s Sustainable Economic Development Assessment (SEDA) to gain insight into your country’s overall social and economic conditions.
Without a doubt, there is a connection between a country’s wealth and economic growth and improvements to its overall well-being. So rather than focusing solely on GDP per capita—the most frequently used indicator of a country’s general welfare—BCG designed SEDA, a proprietary diagnostic tool built to objectively measure a country‘s sustainable economic growth and citizen well-being.
SEDA combines data on outcomes (such as health and education) with quasi-objective data (such as governance assessments). It also assesses how a country performs relative either to the entire universe of 143 countries or to individual peers or groups.
SEDA offers a current snapshot of a country’s sustainable economic development assessment ranking as well as a measure of progress over time, and it complements purely economic indicators like GDP. However, SEDA doesn’t include purely subjective measures. Other metrics based on subjective measures—such as the ones used in the UN’s Happiness Report—offer valuable complementary, but separate, analyses. In fact, BCG has found a strong overall positive correlation between the UN’s Happiness scores and SEDA scores.
Governments need to look beyond traditional economic metrics like GDP to foster sustainable development and prepare for future crises. They can start by focusing on three priorities.
When addressing critical issues such as nutrition access, clean water, and the digital divide, multilateral solutions aren’t the only answer.
Inequality is a complex challenge. To tackle it, governments should not only provide safety nets for citizens but also create trampolines that help them advance.
BCG research finds that whether it is countries focusing on citizen well-being or companies focusing on ESG, putting environmental and social issues at the heart of strategy pays off.
SEDA defines well-being on the basis of ten dimensions grouped into three categories:
Using indicators from publicly available sources, SEDA assesses country performance for each dimension. The assessment relies on a total of 40 indicators based on the most recently available data. Each indicator’s measure is normalized on a scale of 0 (the lowest) to 100 (the highest). On the basis of those normalized indicators, a score is calculated for each of the ten dimensions. The scores provide insight into well-being in three ways:
Measure Well-Being to Improve It: The 2019 Sustainable Economic Development Assessment
Well-Being Trends over the Past Decade: The 2018 Sustainable Economic Development Assessment
Why Well-Being Should Drive Growth Strategies: The 2015 Sustainable Economic Development Assessment
Introducing the BCG Sustainable Economic Development Assessment