Measuring Children's Happiness - Black Market - Rain
Andrew Dilnot examines the numbers in the Unicef report which placed Britain at the bottom of a league table for child welfare.
Measuring Children's Happiness
More or Less this week looked at the Unicef report that put the welfare of Britain's children at the bottom of an international league of rich nations.
Used by some to condemn the government's record, rubbished by others as biased and politically motivated, what is the truth about what the statistics tell us?
Presenter Andrew Dilnot led the investigation, and says we have picked up little of what is most striking about the data, and the real differences for children in Britain. The devil, as so often, is in the detail.
Smaller surveys for individual countries on which the Unicef report was based, show striking differences, for example, in the way children in England think of school and their friends compared with those in Wales and Scotland.
Black Market
And we looked at how we measure those things people do not want measured, in the black or shadow economy and found out why Polish plumbers might have caused it to shrink.
Rain
Plus, after a couple of weeks of drizzle or worse, why measuring rainfall is not quite the child's play we might expect, and why it is possible to get the wrong kind of rain.
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- Mon 21 May 2007 16:30大象传媒 Radio 4 FM
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