Title: Quality of Life in Ireland
1Quality of Life in Ireland
- Presentation by Clive Brownlee, Diageo Ireland
Gerard ONeill, Amárach Consulting
11th March 2003
2Structure of Presentation
- Background to Study
- The Goodness Index
- International Comparisons
- A Matter of Faith
- Talking Irish
3Background to Study
- 2002 Report Quality of Life in Ireland
- Diageo Ireland in the Happiness Business!
- Amárach Survey of 1,000 Adults Nationwide in late
2001 - The Celtic Tiger The Benefits and Costs of
Change we are richer but are we any happier? - A new approach to measuring quality of life
The Goodness Index - Updating the Index 2003 Survey of 1,000 Adults
- Also - The Irish in Context International
Comparisons - Also - The Changing Role of Religion in Irish
Society
4Money Cant Buy Happiness
Source Indices of GDP per capita as of EU
Average and of Very Satisfied with life as
a whole from Eurobarometer
5Nobody Shouted Stop
Is the rate of change in Irish Society ?
Source Amárach Consulting 1995, Diageo
Ireland Quality of Life Survey, 2003
6The Goodness Index
7The Goodness Index
- The challenge then is to look beneath the
economic headlines and to identify the real
drivers of quality of life and life satisfaction
for people - How did we do it?
- We asked individuals to score their own quality
of life out of 10 (where 1 was very poor, and 10
was very good) - We then looked at their answers to a range of
other questions and measured the relationship
between their answers to these other questions
and their own individual life quality score - We found that most of the variation in answers to
the question on quality of life in our survey
could be explained by just four variables
8Explaining Quality of Life
- The variables, in order of importance, are
- How happy people say they are
- How satisfied they are with their family life
- How healthy people say they are
- How satisfied people are with their financial
circumstances - We have now updated the Goodness Index to show
the trend between 2001 and 2003
9Building The Goodness Index
72.3 out of 100in 2001
25
24
18
33
10The Goodness Index 2001-2003
Source Diageo Ireland Quality of Life Surveys,
2001 2003
11What Does This Tell Us?
- Despite the economic uncertainty since the first
survey in 2001, Irish people have become more
content with their quality of life as measured by
The Goodness Index - Most of the increase in the Index (on a weighted
basis) can be explained by a strong increase in
the proportion of people who say that taking
all things together they are personally very
happy - This reinforces the point made earlier, that
there is only a limited connection between the
wider state of the economy and peoples overall
life satisfaction in good times or bad!
12International Comparisons
13International Comparisons
- Since the development of The Goodness Index, a
number of similar measures have been developed
around the world - The most interesting one is the Australian Unity
Wellbeing Index which looks at two separate
measures, namely - the Personal Wellbeing Index (PWI) how people
feel about their own personal situation (similar
to The Goodness Index), and - the National Wellbeing Index (NWI) how people
feel about the wider national situation - Also survey based, the sample is asked to score a
range of aspects of their lives and of the
country from zero to 10, where zero means they
are completely dissatisfied, and 10 means they
are completely satisfied - In a sense, we are comparing the wellbeing of the
motherland with the diaspora!
14Personal Wellbeing Index
Source Australian Unity Wellbeing Index, Survey
5, November 2002 Diageo Ireland Quality of Life
Survey, 2003
15National Wellbeing Index
Source Australian Unity Wellbeing Index, Survey
5, November 2002 Diageo Ireland Quality of Life
Survey, 2003
16What Does This Tell Us?
- On balance, the Irish are as satisfied overall
with their personal lives as Australians - However, the Irish are generally less satisfied
with the state of nation than Australians
suggesting that there is a weaker connection
between personal quality of life and national
economic and social performance in Ireland - Though some of the differences across the two
measures of personal and national wellbeing are
significant, the overall similarity in terms of
drivers of wellbeing and life satisfaction are
quite consistent a legacy, perhaps, of the
historical (and genetic!) connections between the
two countries
17A Matter of Faith
18A Matter of Faith
- A defining feature of Irish culture and society
has been the role of religion in everyday life - It has also defined our national identity at home
and abroad Saint Patrick for example! - We have used the Diageo Ireland Quality of Life
Survey 2003 to take a brief look at the state of
faith in Irish Society at the start of the 21st
Century
19Faith of Our Fathers
Which if any of the following do you believe in
?
Source European Social Values Study, 1981
Diageo Ireland Quality of Life Survey, 2003
20The New Generation Gap
Level of Satisfaction with your religion or
spirituality
Source Australian Unity Wellbeing Index, Survey
5, November 2002 Diageo Ireland Quality of Life
Survey, 2003
21The Faith of Nations
Source Pew Research Center, December 2002
Eurostat 2003 Diageo Ireland Quality of Life
Survey, 2003
22A Crisis of Confidence
Having a Great Deal of Confidence in
Source Diageo Ireland Quality of Life Surveys,
2001 2003
23What Does This Tell Us?
- Ireland, like most developed countries, has
experienced a sea change in religious values in
recent decades so we are not unique in that
regard - If anything we are now a more secular society
than others we traditionally thought of as more
secular than us Britain, for example and even
Australia - There is a wider context to some of the changes
in Ireland as evident by the decline in
confidence in the Church but it is too early to
tell what long-term effects these institutional
changes will have on personal belief systems and
peoples own satisfaction with religion in their
lives
24Talking Irish
25Talking Irish
- Despite the doom and gloom of the headlines, the
Irish at the start of the 21st Century are still
enjoying a good quality of life - We even enjoy a similar sense of personal
wellbeing as the Australians - despite our
weather! - But we seem uneasy with the state of our nation
in general and with the performance of some of
our national institutions in particular - A challenge for this Symposium is to determine
whether our personal contentment and optimism can
be a force for change at a national and
international level or a force for conservatism - Nevertheless, if we can find a way to export our
happiness as effectively as we export our goods
(and previously, our people), then the future
looks bright indeed for Ireland and the Irish
26Measure Your Own Goodness Index!
www.amarach.com
27THANK YOU
Quality of Life in Ireland
- Presentation by Clive Brownlee, Diageo Ireland
Gerard ONeill, Amárach Consulting