Abstract
Osberg and
Sharpe develop a new measure of economic well-being for selected OECD countries
for the period 1980 to 1996 and compare trends in this new Index to GDP per
capita. They argue that the economic well-being of a society depends on the
level of average consumption flows, aggregate accumulation of productive
stocks, inequality in the distribution of individual
incomes and insecurity in the anticipation of future income.