The Economics of Social Measurement Processes: Some Questions of Public Policy Indicator Design
Abstract
Indicators of economic and social phenomena can be useful descriptive and analytical inputs for public policy. The “social indicators movement” has emerged in the last decade and is devoted to the measurement of widely‐ranging dimensions of human welfare. For the most part, questions of systematic measurement for public policy are explored here. Drawing initially on some traditions of measurement in economics, the principal aim is to provide a broad theoretical frame of reference for policy indicator design. Questions of indicator development necessarily involve ideas of suitability or validity of indicators designed for a purpose. Approaches to indicator design for the purpose of enhancing collective decision‐making—including formal model building approaches—are subsumed as special cases once a more general theory is espoused in sections II and III.
Citation
Endres, A.M. (1982), "The Economics of Social Measurement Processes: Some Questions of Public Policy Indicator Design", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 9 No. 1, pp. 3-39. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb013911
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1982, MCB UP Limited