New Economics Foundation

The New Economics Foundation
Abbreviation NEF
Motto Economics as if people and the planet mattered.
Formation 1986
Type ecological economics public policy think tank
Headquarters 3 Jonathan Street, London, United Kingdom
Executive Director

Director of Operations
Stewart Wallis



Elna Kotze
Website www.neweconomics.org

The New Economics Foundation (NEF) is a British think-tank that promotes social, economic and environmental justice.[1]

NEF was founded in 1986 by the leaders of The Other Economic Summit (TOES) with the aim of working for a "new model of wealth creation, based on equality, diversity and economic stability".[2]

The foundation has 50 staff in London and is active at a range of different levels. Its programmes include work on well-being, its own kinds of measurement and evaluation, sustainable local regeneration, its own forms of finance and business models, sustainable public services, and the economics of climate change.

Work

NEF works in the areas of community development, democracy, and economics. The foundation's work on sustainability indicators, which measures aspects of life and environment, indicated the connection between economic growth and sustainability.[3]

From 1995 to 2000 NEF made social audits of companies to measure and evaluate a company's social and ethical performance according to its standards. This work was instrumental in the formation of the Institute of Social and Ethical Accountability to promote professional standards around social accounting and auditing.[4]

Jubilee 2000 campaign

Main article: Jubilee 2000

The Jubilee 2000 campaign, strategized for and run by NEF,[5] collected 24 million signatures for its worldwide petition on development and poverty.[6]

Local Money Flows

NEF has also developed a Local money Flows measurement program and enables the mapping of money flows through the local economy.[7]

Happy Planet Index

Main article: Happy Planet Index

In July 2006, NEF launched the Happy Planet Index, intended to challenge existing indices of a state's success, such as Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Human Development Index (HDI).

21-hour working week

In February 2010 the New Economic Foundation called for gradual transition to a working week of 21 hours.[8]

History

James Robertson, a British economist, and Alison Pritchard, a Schumacher Society Council member, helped to set up The Other Economic Summit (TOES) and NEF.[9] Ed Mayo was Chief Executive from 1992 until 2003.[10] The current executive director is Stewart Wallis.

At the policy level, NEF has attracted Gordon Brown (when he was Chancellor of the Exchequer) to chair some of its events. The organization has launched a range of new organizations to promote its ideas, including the Ethical Trading Initiative, AccountAbility, Time Banking UK, London Rebuilding Society, the Community Development Finance Association, and others.

The organization's current projects include measuring local money flows, developing new kinds of business enterprise, and introducing techniques of sustainable regeneration (Local Alchemy). NEF's BizFizz program, an entrepreneurship development program has created more than 900 new businesses in deprived areas. The organization has now taken this and Local Alchemy to six other countries through its international programme.

At a cultural level, NEF events at the Hay literary festival attract well-known speakers. Its Clone Town campaign in favour of local economic diversity was covered two years running by every major national newspaper and TV news station and it was taken up in the Save Our Small Shops Campaign in the Evening Standard.

The organization was voted Think-Tank of the Year in 2002/3. In 2010 NEF announced a long-term alliance with the New Economics Institute in the USA.

Funding

NEF is a registered charity and is funded by individual supporters, public finance businesses and international grant-giving bodies.[11]

Publications

Publications include:

See also

References

External links