 on traditional measures, budget surpluses, people would look at us and go, you're doing okay. But we have homelessness, it's staggering rates. One of the highest rates of youth suicide in the OECD. Our mental health and wellbeing is not what it should be. So our plan is through the wellbeing work that we're doing, a living standards framework and our wellbeing budget where if you're a minister, you wanna spend money, you have to prove that you are going to improve intergenerational wellbeing. We are hoping to embed in actually what the public is asking us for, to address the societal wellbeing of our nation, not just our economic wellbeing. Robert Kennedy, I think said it very poetically, he said that the GDP doesn't measure the beauty of our poetry, the cleanliness of our air, the happiness of our children. In short, it doesn't measure all the things it makes life worth living. And that's something I think we can do better on. If you substitute Wikipedia for Encyclopedia Britannica, you get a lot more knowledge for free. And GDP actually goes down, because the production cost is less. But I would think that most of us would agree that our wellbeing, our welfare goes up. So you can see GDP and welfare are two different concepts. There is no one number that will capture everything. Just as when you're driving in a car, it wouldn't make sense to average together the speed and the how much gas you have in the tank and the oil pressure and the temperature in your air conditioning to one number. That would be a useless number. Similarly, we can't expect GDP to measure everything in the economy. Any minister who wants to deliver a bid and say, I want to spend some money here, has to show how it will benefit us at an intergenerational level. They also have to work with other ministers. So the minister of health might want to work with the minister of child poverty and start delivering interventions that make a difference 30 years down the track. I think it's the end of GDP. I think it's the beginning though of doing things differently. And we distill it down in New Zealand just to say that for us, it's about bringing kindness and empathy to governance and measures of wellbeing help us to do that.