Healthy, safe and getting along with each other: Australia attempts to look beyond GDP to measure what matters

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Too often economists reduce important issues, like prosperity, to a narrow set of indicators such as gross domestic product to measure national progress.Anything that boosts GDP is good, right?Well, no, of course not.Growing the size of the economy while wrecking the environment or making people miserable is no step forward.So a number of countries around the world – including the UK, Canada and New Zealand – have introduced alternative ways to measure wellbeing that goes “beyond GDP”.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailTreasury, under the direction of Jim Chalmers, established the “Measuring What Matters” framework in 2023 to track our progress towards “a more healthy, secure, sustainable, cohesive and prosperous Australia”.

Here’s a selection from each theme as laid out in the ABS’s latest update on the Measuring What Matters indicators, which pulls information from various sources to paint a wider picture of Australia’s progress.Costs and waiting times are key factors when it comes to how easy it is for people to access healthcare.The Measuring What Matters report shows access has become more difficult on both counts over the past decade, and especially since the pandemic.The share of patients who said they waited longer than they felt was acceptable to see a GP has climbed from 16.6% in 2020-21 to 28% in 2023-24.

When it came to delays getting a specialist appointment, the proportion who said they waited longer than acceptable was 29% in 2023-24, up from 22% three years earlier.And cost has also become a bigger barrier.In 2023-24, 9% of patients said they delayed seeing a GP due to the expense – more than triple the 2.4% share in 2020-21.And 10% said they delayed seeing a specialist for the same reason last year, compared with 5.

9% a few years earlier,There’s evidence that the constant barrage of bad news from overseas is weighing on our collective psyche, according to the report’s gauge of “national safety”, or “living peacefully and feeling safe”,In 2025, just over half of Australians reported feeling safe or very safe based on views of world events, the ABS said, versus 91% in 2005 and 80% a decade ago,“Since 2020, very low proportions of people have reported feeling very safe,” the ABS noted,On a day when the government released its “scary” report into the devastating potential impacts on Australia from climate change, the Measuring What Matters report shows net greenhouse gas emissions of 446.

4m tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2024.That is 27% below emissions in the year to June 2005, which is the baseline year for our 2030 emission reduction target of 43%.Sign up to Breaking News AustraliaGet the most important news as it breaksafter newsletter promotionWorryingly, there hasn’t been much progress in the 2020s.Part of a cohesive country is one that accepts diversity – a topic that’s top of mind amid anti-immigration marches both here and abroad.The share of Australians who agree or strongly agree accepting immigrants from many countries makes Australia stronger dropped from a peak of 78% in 2023, to 71% in 2024.

Still, that remains higher than pre-pandemic levels broadly in the mid-60s and suggests we remain proud of our multiculturalism.Australians are getting richer and generally earning more over time.But a prosperous country isn’t just rich, it’s also equal – or at least not terribly unequal.A recognised way of measuring equality is via the “Gini coefficient”, which can range between zero and one, where the lower the score the more equal the distribution.Australia’s latest Gini coefficient, based on the latest household, income and labour dynamics in Australia (Hilda) survey, is 0.

307 in 2022-23 – a marked improvement from the year before but broadly equivalent to what it’s been over the past 20 years,That said, it’s still too early to judge whether the pandemic has made us more unequal, but the early signs are positive,In 2022 we had the 16th-highest level of income inequality among the 37 OECD countries for which data was available, the ABS said,
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The Guide #208: How theatre is holding its own in the age of artificial intelligence

Last year, more than 37 million people settled their behinds into the red-velvet upholstery, plastic chairs or wooden “I’ll only tolerate this because it’s the Globe” benches of a theatre. West End attendance has reportedly grown by 11% and regional audiences have increased by 4% since 2019 – pretty impressive amid a cost of living crisis and after a pandemic that had us all locked in our houses.The increase in attendance can be chalked up to all sorts of reasons: the post-Covid return of tourists to the UK, schemes offering more reasonably priced tickets, and big films such as Wicked leaving people wondering what that Defying Gravity note sounds like live. But I’d throw another contender into the mix: the rise of AI.For some, AI’s arrival has been exciting or, at the very least, handy – who doesn’t want to outsource life’s grunt work, or get an expert photo editor/nutritionist/therapist for nothing? For others, it feels bleak and bewildering

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From Spinal Tap II to Ed Sheeran : your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Spinal Tap II: The End ContinuesOut nowFollowing up one of the greatest comedies ever made is a tough act, but here come Rob Reiner et al to have a bash at rekindling the magic. Luckily the subject matter of an ageing band still determined to take it to 11 has plenty of real-world touchstones to keep this particular parody relevant.From Ground Zero: Stories from GazaOut nowTwenty-two directors come together via producer Rashid Masharawi and exec producer Michael Moore to create this documentary about Israel’s ongoing genocide in Gaza, which – as reported by a UN special committee, Amnesty International and Médecins Sans Frontières – has created the largest group of child amputees per capita in history and created a deliberate man-made famine, among other violations of international law.The Long WalkOut nowIn a version of the United States ruled by a fascist regime, a group of young men take part in a contest where they must always walk a speed of at least three miles per hour or be shot by their military chaperones. So it’s got a Squid Game meets Hunger Games vibe, based on the 1979 novel by Stephen King

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Seth Meyers on Charlie Kirk shooting: ‘Political violence is abhorrent to the highest ideals of this country’

Late-night hosts reacted to the assassination of the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk and decried the rising tide of political violence in the US.Seth Meyers opened Thursday’s Late Night with a separate segment on the Kirk assassination. “We are horrified by this grotesque tragedy and our condolences go out to his family and loved ones,” he said. “It should never be a matter of political ideology to mourn and to extend our fullest and deepest empathy to those who are suffering.“Political violence is abhorrent and anathema to the highest ideals of this country,” he continued

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Shrinking audiences, a cash crisis and rivals on the rise: what’s gone wrong at Tate?

When a national institution starts to sound like Spın̈al Tap, you know it’s in trouble.Recently, Tate channelled the mythic rock band’s claim that its audience was not shrinking, just “becoming more selective”. In response to a decline in visitor numbers and a cash crisis leading to redundancies, the museum group emphasised “record numbers of young visitors” to Tate Modern (who cares about all those uncool visitors above the age of 35?).Yet in the summer, Tate’s director, Maria Balshaw, blamed the group’s problems on a dearth of 16-24-year-old visitors from continental Europe. So they appeal to youth, but the wrong youth?This week, Tate Modern will open a blockbuster show that may attract paying adults

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Protesters target Royal Opera House over performance by ‘Putin’s diva’

Dozens of protesters have gathered outside the Royal Opera House to demonstrate against an eminent Russian opera singer nicknamed “Putin’s diva” who performed on the opening night of Tosca.Anna Netrebko, 53, one of the world’s best-known sopranos, who draws full houses for her performances at leading opera houses globally, has denied being an ally of the Russian leader.She was ostracised by most major opera houses in the months after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, despite releasing a statement unequivocally condemning the conflict.Netrebko, who has not performed in Russia since 2022, was given a People’s Artist award in 2008 by Vladimir Putin. The crowd of about 50 protesters congregated outside the central London venue included Natalia Filatova, 48, who was wrapped in the Ukrainian flag

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And if your head explodes: Pink Floyd’s 20 best songs – ranked!

Fifty years after the release of Wish You Were Here, we count down the best of the band’s Syd Barrett years, their difficult recovery and later reunionLow on memorable tunes, big on racked, strangulated lead vocals, possessed of a worldview that makes every other Pink Floyd album look like a gushing font of Pollyanna-ish optimism, The Final Cut is a slog. But The Gunner’s Dream cuts through the gloom, thanks to a heartbreaking, fragile melody.Overshadowed by the albums that preceded and followed it, Obscured by Clouds might be the most underrated release in Pink Floyd’s catalogue: it boasts fantastic instrumental experiments, musical signposts to The Dark Side of the Moon and, in Wot’s … Uh the Deal?, a beautifully careworn, Beatles-y ballad undersold by its daft title.The studio half of Ummagumma is a mess – a band audibly searching for direction without success – but it contains one unequivocal triumph: Roger Waters’ evocation of the parkland on the banks of the River Cam, its pastoral calm spiked with a curious sense of menace, as if something nasty is lurking in the undergrowth.The More soundtrack throws up everything from proto-heavy metal and mock-flamenco to bongo solos