Nic Marks: The Happy Planet Index

258,119 views ・ 2010-08-30

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:17
Martin Luther King
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did not say,
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"I have a nightmare,"
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when he inspired the civil rights movements.
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He said, "I have a dream."
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And I have a dream.
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I have a dream that we can stop thinking
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that the future will be a nightmare,
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and this is going to be a challenge,
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because, if you think
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of every major blockbusting film of recent times,
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nearly all of its visions for humanity
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are apocalyptic.
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I think this film
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is one of the hardest watches of modern times, "The Road."
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It's a beautiful piece of filmmaking,
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but everything is desolate,
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everything is dead.
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And just a father and son
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trying to survive, walking along the road.
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And I think the environmental movement
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of which I am a part of
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has been complicit
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in creating this vision of the future.
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For too long,
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we have peddled a nightmarish vision
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of what's going to happen.
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We have focused on the worst-case scenario.
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We have focused on the problems.
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And we have not thought enough
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about the solutions.
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We've used fear, if you like,
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to grab people's attention.
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And any psychologist will tell you
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that fear in the organism
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is linked to flight mechanism.
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It's part of the fight and flight mechanism,
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that when an animal is frightened --
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think of a deer.
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A deer freezes very, very still,
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poised to run away.
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And I think that's what we're doing
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when we're asking people to engage with our agenda
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around environmental degradation and climate change.
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People are freezing and running away
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because we're using fear.
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And I think the environmental movement has to grow up
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and start to think about
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what progress is.
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What would it be like to be improving the human lot?
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And one of the problems that we face, I think,
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is that the only people that have cornered the market
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in terms of progress
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is a financial definition of what progress is,
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an economic definition of what progress is --
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that somehow,
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if we get the right numbers to go up,
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we're going to be better off,
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whether that's on the stock market,
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whether that's with GDP
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and economic growth,
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that somehow life is going to get better.
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This is somehow appealing to human greed
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instead of fear --
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that more is better.
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Come on. In the Western world, we have enough.
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Maybe some parts of the world don't, but we have enough.
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And we've know for a long time that this is not a good measure
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of the welfare of nations.
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In fact, the architect of our national accounting system,
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Simon Kuznets, in the 1930s,
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said that, "A nation's welfare
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can scarcely be inferred from their national income."
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But we've created a national accounting system
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which is firmly based on production
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and producing stuff.
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And indeed, this is probably historical, and it had its time.
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In the second World War, we needed to produce a lot of stuff.
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And indeed, we were so successful at producing certain types of stuff
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that we destroyed a lot of Europe, and we had to rebuild it afterwards.
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And so our national accounting system
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became fixated on what we can produce.
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But as early as 1968,
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this visionary man, Robert Kennedy,
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at the start of his ill-fated presidential campaign,
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gave the most eloquent deconstruction
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of gross national product
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that ever has been.
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And he finished his talk with the phrase,
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that, "The gross national product
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measures everything except that
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which makes life worthwhile."
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How crazy is that? That our measure of progress,
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our dominant measure of progress in society,
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is measuring everything
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except that which makes life worthwhile?
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I believe, if Kennedy was alive today,
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he would be asking statisticians such as myself
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to go out and find out
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what makes life worthwhile.
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He'd be asking us to redesign
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our national accounting system
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to be based upon
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such important things as social justice,
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sustainability
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and people's well-being.
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And actually, social scientists have already gone out
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and asked these questions around the world.
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This is from a global survey.
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It's asking people, what do they want.
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And unsurprisingly, people all around the world
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say that what they want
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is happiness, for themselves,
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for their families, their children,
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their communities.
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Okay, they think money is slightly important.
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It's there, but it's not nearly as important as happiness,
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and it's not nearly as important as love.
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We all need to love and be loved in life.
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It's not nearly as important as health.
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We want to be healthy and live a full life.
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These seem to be natural human aspirations.
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Why are statisticians not measuring these?
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Why are we not thinking of the progress of nations in these terms,
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instead of just how much stuff we have?
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And really, this is what I've done with my adult life --
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is think about how do we measure happiness,
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how do we measure well-being,
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how can we do that within environmental limits.
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And we created, at the organization that I work for,
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the New Economics Foundation,
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something we call the Happy Planet Index,
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because we think people should be happy and the planet should be happy.
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Why don't we create a measure of progress that shows that?
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And what we do,
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is we say that the ultimate outcome of a nation
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is how successful is it
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at creating happy and healthy lives for its citizens.
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That should be the goal
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of every nation on the planet.
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But we have to remember
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that there's a fundamental input to that,
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and that is how many of the planet's resources we use.
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We all have one planet. We all have to share it.
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It is the ultimate scarce resource,
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the one planet that we share.
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And economics is very interested in scarcity.
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When it has a scarce resource
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that it wants to turn into
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a desirable outcome,
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it thinks in terms of efficiency.
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It thinks in terms of how much bang do we get for our buck.
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And this is a measure of how much well-being
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we get for our planetary resource use.
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It is an efficiency measure.
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And probably the easiest way to show you that,
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is to show you this graph.
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Running horizontally along the graph,
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is "ecological footprint,"
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which is a measure of how much resources we use
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and how much pressure we put on the planet.
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More is bad.
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Running vertically upwards,
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is a measure called "happy life years."
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It's about the well-being of nations.
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It's like a happiness adjusted life-expectancy.
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It's like quality and quantity of life in nations.
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And the yellow dot there you see, is the global average.
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Now, there's a huge array of nations
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around that global average.
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To the top right of the graph,
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are countries which are doing reasonably well and producing well-being,
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but they're using a lot of planet to get there.
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They are the U.S.A.,
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other Western countries going across in those triangles
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and a few Gulf states in there actually.
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Conversely, at the bottom left of the graph,
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are countries that are not producing much well-being --
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typically, sub-Saharan Africa.
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In Hobbesian terms,
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life is short and brutish there.
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The average life expectancy in many of these countries
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is only 40 years.
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Malaria, HIV/AIDS
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are killing a lot of people
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in these regions of the world.
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But now for the good news!
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There are some countries up there, yellow triangles,
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that are doing better than global average,
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that are heading up towards the top left of the graph.
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This is an aspirational graph.
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We want to be top left, where good lives don't cost the earth.
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They're Latin American.
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The country on its own up at the top
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is a place I haven't been to.
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Maybe some of you have.
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Costa Rica.
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Costa Rica --
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average life expectancy is 78-and-a-half years.
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That is longer than in the USA.
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They are, according to the latest Gallup world poll,
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the happiest nation on the planet --
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than anybody; more than Switzerland and Denmark.
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They are the happiest place.
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They are doing that
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on a quarter of the resources
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that are used typically in [the] Western world --
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a quarter of the resources.
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What's going on there?
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What's happening in Costa Rica?
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We can look at some of the data.
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99 percent of their electricity comes from renewable resources.
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Their government is one of the first to commit
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to be carbon neutral by 2021.
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They abolished the army
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in 1949 --
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1949.
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And they invested in social programs --
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health and education.
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They have one of the highest literacy rates in Latin America
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and in the world.
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And they have that Latin vibe, don't they.
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They have the social connectedness.
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(Laughter)
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The challenge is, that possibly -- and the thing we might have to think about --
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is that the future
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might not be North American,
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might not be Western European.
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It might be Latin American.
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And the challenge, really,
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is to pull the global average up here.
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That's what we need to do.
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And if we're going to do that,
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we need to pull countries from the bottom,
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and we need to pull countries from the right of the graph.
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And then we're starting to create a happy planet.
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That's one way of looking at it.
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Another way of looking at it is looking at time trends.
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We don't have good data going back for every country in the world,
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but for some of the richest countries, the OECD group, we do.
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And this is the trend in well-being over that time,
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a small increase,
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but this is the trend in ecological footprint.
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And so in strict happy-planet methodology,
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we've become less efficient
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at turning our ultimate scarce resource
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into the outcome we want to.
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And the point really is, is that I think,
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probably everybody in this room
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would like society to get to 2050
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without an apocalyptic
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something happening.
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It's actually not very long away.
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It's half a human lifetime away.
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A child entering school today
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will be my age in 2050.
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This is not the very distant future.
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This is what the U.K. government target
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on carbon and greenhouse emissions looks like.
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And I put it to you, that is not business as usual.
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That is changing our business.
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That is changing the way we create our organizations,
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we do our government policy and we live our lives.
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And the point is,
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we need to carry on increasing well-being.
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No one can go to the polls
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and say that quality of life is going to reduce.
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None of us, I think,
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want human progress to stop.
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I think we want it to carry on.
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I think we want the lot of humanity to keep on increasing.
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And I think this is where climate change skeptics and deniers come in.
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I think this is what they want. They want quality of life to keep increasing.
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They want to hold on to what they've got.
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And if we're going to engage them,
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I think that's what we've got to do.
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And that means we have to really increase efficiency even more.
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Now that's all very easy to draw graphs and things like that,
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but the point is we need to turn those curves.
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And this is where I think we can take a leaf
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out of systems theory, systems engineers,
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where they create feedback loops,
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put the right information at the right point of time.
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Human beings are very motivated by the "now."
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You put a smart meter in your home,
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and you see how much electricity you're using right now,
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how much it's costing you,
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your kids go around and turn the lights off pretty quickly.
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What would that look like for society?
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Why is it, on the radio news every evening,
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I hear the FTSE 100, the Dow Jones, the dollar pound ratio --
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I don't even know which way the dollar pound ratio should go to be good news.
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And why do I hear that?
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Why don't I hear how much energy Britain used yesterday,
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or American used yesterday?
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Did we meet our three percent annual target
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on reducing carbon emissions?
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That's how you create a collective goal.
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You put it out there into the media and start thinking about it.
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And we need positive feedback loops
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for increasing well-being
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At a government level, they might create national accounts of well-being.
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At a business level, you might look at the well-being of your employees,
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which we know is really linked to creativity,
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which is linked to innovation,
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and we're going to need a lot of innovation to deal with those environmental issues.
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At a personal level, we need these nudges too.
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Maybe we don't quite need the data, but we need reminders.
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In the U.K., we have a strong public health message
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on five fruit and vegetables a day
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and how much exercise we should do -- never my best thing.
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What are these for happiness?
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What are the five things that you should do every day
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to be happier?
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We did a project for the Government Office of Science a couple of years ago,
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a big program called the Foresight program --
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lots and lots of people -- involved lots of experts --
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everything evidence based -- a huge tome.
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But a piece of work we did was on: what five positive actions can you do
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to improve well-being in your life?
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And the point of these is
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they are, not quite, the secrets of happiness,
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but they are things that I think happiness will flow out the side from.
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And the first of these is to connect,
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is that your social relationships
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are the most important cornerstones of your life.
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Do you invest the time with your loved ones
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that you could do, and energy?
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Keep building them.
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The second one is be active.
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The fastest way out of a bad mood:
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step outside, go for a walk, turn the radio on and dance.
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Being active is great for our positive mood.
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The third one is take notice.
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How aware are you of things going on around the world,
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the seasons changing, people around you?
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Do you notice what's bubbling up for you and trying to emerge?
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Based on a lot of evidence for mindfulness,
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cognitive behavioral therapy,
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[very] strong for our well being.
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The fourth is keep learning
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and keep is important --
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learning throughout the whole life course.
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Older people who keep learning and are curious,
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they have much better health outcomes than those who start to close down.
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But it doesn't have to be formal learning; it's not knowledge based.
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It's more curiosity.
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It can be learning to cook a new dish,
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picking up an instrument you forgot as a child.
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Keep learning.
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And the final one
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is that most anti-economic of activities,
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but give.
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Our generosity, our altruism,
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our compassion,
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are all hardwired
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to the reward mechanism in our brain.
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We feel good if we give.
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You can do an experiment where you give
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two groups of people a hundred dollars in the morning.
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You tell one of them to spend it on themselves
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and one on other people.
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You measure their happiness at the end of the day,
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those that have gone and spent on other people are much happier
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that those that spent it on themselves.
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And these five ways,
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which we put onto these handy postcards,
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I would say, don't have to cost the earth.
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They don't have any carbon content.
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They don't need a lot of material goods to be satisfied.
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And so I think it's really quite feasible
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that happiness does not cost the earth.
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Now, Martin Luther King,
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on the eve of his death,
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gave an incredible speech.
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He said, "I know there are challenges ahead,
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there may be trouble ahead,
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but I fear no one. I don't care.
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I have been to the mountain top,
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and I have seen the Promised Land."
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Now, he was a preacher,
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but I believe the environmental movement
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and, in fact, the business community, government,
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needs to go to the top of the mountain top,
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and it needs to look out,
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and it needs to see the Promised Land,
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or the land of promise,
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and it needs to have a vision
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of a world that we all want.
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And not only that, we need to create a Great Transition
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to get there,
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and we need to pave that great transition with good things.
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Human beings want to be happy.
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Pave them with the five ways.
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And we need to have signposts
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gathering people together and pointing them --
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something like the Happy Planet Index.
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And then I believe
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that we can all create a world we all want,
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where happiness does not cost the earth.
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(Applause)
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Original video on YouTube.com
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