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Our Team
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Mark Anielski President and CEO of Anielski Management Inc (AMI). As an economist I work with communities, businesses and governments to help them assess, measure and manage their genuine wealth -- the things that matter most to their well-being, quality of life and sustainability. I believe that what we measure reveals our true values. I
believe we need to measure progress in terms of what matters most in our
lives (quality of life) and use indicators of progress that align with
those values. My vision is an economy of well-being focused on the quality
of life conditions of households. Households, I believe, represent the
original enterprise and are the key building blocks of vibrant, flourishing,
and civil societies. Afterall, economics comes from the Greek (oikonomia)
meaning prudent household management. In addition to my consulting practise, I teach Sustainable Economics at the new Bainbridge Graduate Institute (Washington) -- the first sustainability MBA program in US in sustainable buisness enterprise whose goal is to "integrate the wisdom of sustainability, ethics, and social responsibility into business practice via management education and research .business sustainability, ethics and corporate social responsibility". I am also an Adjunct Professor at the University of Alberta, School of Business and teach a course in Corporate Social Responsibility and Social Entrepreneurship . Since 1999 I have served as a Senior Fellow with the Oakland-based economic policy think-tank, Redefining Progress. In 1999, along with economic journalist Jonathan Rowe, I completed the update to the U.S. Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI): a new measure of progress that accounts for the regrettable social and environmental depreciation costs that are otherwise treated as "growth" or as a benefit in the key economic performance statistic, the GDP (gross domestic product). I am also an ecological economist by profession and am the current President of the Canadian Society for Ecological Economics (CANSEE). I am also a founding Board member of the International Sustainability Indicators Network (ISIN). In 2001 Iserved as advisor and contributing author to the Sustainability Reporting Guidelines of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) that now help businesses, worldwide, develop corporate sustainability and "triple-bottom-line" (economic-social-environmental) reports. In 2001 I led a team of economists at the Pembina Institute (an Alberta-based environmental think-tank) in developing a prototype sustainability measurement system for the province of Alberta called Alberta Genuine Progress Indicators (GPI) Sustainable Well-being Accounting System. This comprehensive sustainability accounting exercise included 30 technical reports (see Publications) that tracked the sustainable progress of 51 key economic, social and environmental indicators from 1961-1999. Prior to the Alberta GPI study, in 2000 I led another Pembina research study to develop a prototype sustainability accounting framework for the Yukon called “The Sustainable Progress Indicators” to measure the sustainability of Yukon's economy, environment and society. One of my most rewarding projects was the completion of a Genuine Wealth Indicators framework for the Inuit of Nunvat in Canada's eastern Arctic; the first genuine wealth measurement system for First Nations that aligns First Nation values with First Nation indicators of economic, social and environmental well-being. In 2000, I co-authored a piece of Finance Minister Paul Martin's 2000 Budget that dedicated $9 million over three years to the development of Canada's first environment and sustainable development indicators, released in May of 2003. For those three years I sat on the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy (NRTEE) guiding the project. I was instrumental in shaping the NRTEE's recommendation that the Government of Canada expand the System of National Accounts (from which GDP is derived) to include more detailed information on natural, human and, over time, social capital. If implemented, this would make Canada the first nation in the world to adopt a total capital accounting system that could measure the overall sustainability of the nation. In a volunteer capacity I have served on the board of the Edmonton City Centre Church Corporation, the Edmonton Social Planning Council and other organizations committed to advocating for the well-being of some our more economically disadvantaged citizens. I
recently completed my first book titled The
Economics of Happiness: Building Genuine Wealth In the book I propose
a new vision for economics and new system for measuring and managing progress
based on the values and well-being conditions of households and business
enterprises in our communities. The book also contains examples of how
genuine wealth is being developed all over the world. I propose a “new
genuine wealth” system of reporting on progress, including a new
wealth balance sheet for our communities and nations upon which we can
better manage for sustainability and quality of life outcomes. |
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