Ferdinando Giugliano, Columnist

Italy Is Right to Measure 'La Dolce Vita'

Fifty years on, the Italian government wants to fulfill Robert Kennedy's dream.

Life is sweet.

Photographer: Chris Warde-Jones/Bloomberg
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Italy has long prided itself for its quality of life -- and with good reason. Italy may be only just recovering from a long economic crisis, but its citizens are healthier and live longer than those of most other countries in the world.

It is perhaps no coincidence then that the Italian government is pioneering the use of welfare indicators in its budget process. As of this year, the finance ministry will produce official forecasts for 12 indicators, ranging from income inequality to carbon dioxide emissions to obesity -- the first country to do so in the EU and the G-7.