Measuring sustainable development goals performance /
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
---|---|
Autores principales: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam, Netherlands :
Elsevier,
2021.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover
- MEASURING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS PERFORMANCE
- MEASURING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS PERFORMANCE
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introduction
- RECENT INITIATIVES
- ANALYTICAL TREATMENT
- THE COVID-19 CHALLENGE AND THE GREAT RESET
- I
- MULTI-DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS
- Overview
- One
- Economic growth and sustainability
- 1.1 Gross domestic product and beyond
- 1.2 Doubting the blessings of economic growth
- 1.3 The millennium development goals and the 2030 agenda for sustainable development
- 1.4 The SDG welfare function
- 1.5 Calculating the effectiveness of policy
- 1.6 A brief numerical look
- 1.7 The frontier
- 1.8 Subfrontier nations
- 1.9 Interpretation
- 1.10 Concluding thoughts
- Two
- Diagnostics for economic and social policy
- 2.1 International initiatives
- 2.2 Tinbergen on economic policy
- 2.3 Goals of economic and social policy
- 2.4 The policy parameters
- 2.5 The effectiveness of economic and social policy
- 2.6 Data envelopment analysis
- 2.7 Constructing the frontier
- 2.8 The mathematics of data envelopment analysis
- Three
- Before and after the pandemic: a dashboard of sustainable development goal metrics for assessing individual ...
- 3.1 Dimensions of individual well-being
- 3.2 Successes and failures
- 3.3 The political impact of the sustainable development goals
- 3.4 The list of policy instruments
- 3.5 A first look at the computing results: Pareto optimal OECD nations
- 3.6 Disequilibrium: the deficit countries
- 3.7 Asking questions
- 3.8 The COVID-19 pandemic: a tentative cognitive map of causes and effects
- 3.9 Official measures of the spread of the virus
- 3.10 A numerical illustration: expanded frontier calculations incorporating the virus survival rate as a sustainable development ...
- Four
- Disequilibrium and chaos.
- 4.1 Path-dependency, lock-in, evolution, creative destruction
- 4.2 Diffusion, self-organization, and chaos
- 4.3 Dissipative processes and disequilibrium
- 4.4 The arrow of time
- Five
- The founding fathers of data envelopment analysis: A. Charnes and W.W. Cooper
- 5.1 The early days of linear programming
- 5.2 Goal programming
- 5.3 Three friends closing ranks
- 5.4 Data envelopment analysis
- EPILOGUE
- 1 ON THE SHORTCOMINGS OF MAINSTREAM ECONOMIC THEORY
- 2 ON THE IMPUISSANCE OF COVID-19 POLICY
- GAMS PROGRAM
- II
- A GENEVA CONSENSUS
- Six
- Beyond Gross Domestic Product
- 6.1 Recognizing the limitations of Gross Domestic Product
- 6.2 The search for a more meaningful metric
- 6.2.1 The human development index and beyond
- 6.2.2 The Sarkozy Commission
- 6.3 Recent progress
- 6.4 An indicator pyramid
- 6.5 Composite indicators
- 6.6 Empirical production/transformation functions
- 6.7 Why data envelopment analysis?
- Seven
- Beyond the Washington Consensus
- 7.1 The Washington Consensus
- 7.2 The Washington Consensus criticized
- 7.3 Post-Washington Consensus
- 7.4 The Barcelona Development Agenda
- 7.5 The way forward
- Eight
- Toward a sustainable globalization
- 8.1 Challenges of globalization
- 8.2 The social dimension of globalization
- 8.3 Widening inequalities
- 8.4 The Oxford Martin Commission
- 8.5 Globalization and poverty
- 8.6 Partnerships for sustainable globalization
- 8.7 Social assessment
- Nine
- Toward a Geneva Consensus
- 9.1 Sustainability and trade-offs
- 9.2 What should economists do?
- 9.3 Bridging the gap between science and policy
- 9.4 Rating country performance by frontier analysis
- 9.5 Data envelopment analysis dual framework, utility maximization, and exchange
- 9.6 Measuring sustainable development goals performance in the age of globalization.
- 9.7 Agenda 2030 in post-COVID-19 global reset
- 9.8 The Geneva Consensus Foundation: a tribute to William W. Cooper
- 9.9 Geneva Consensus global decision-making system
- 9.10 Data revolution
- 9.11 Way forward: a quest for a new paradigm
- Ten . Toward a new social contract
- 10.1 Policy failures and the quest for shared prosperity
- 10.2 The UN reform: from Versailles to Geneva and New York
- 10.3 Beyond a broken social contract
- 10.4 The Calculus of consent, group rationality, and Pareto optimality
- 10.5 Consensus as a norm
- 10.6 A utility function nonexistent until "discovered"
- 10.7 Pareto-Koopmans optimality criteria of fairness and justice
- 10.8 Toward a new social contract for recovery and resilience
- 10.9 Why "Geneva Consensus"?
- References
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- O
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- V
- W
- Y
- Z
- Back Cover.