Considerable effort is being made to develop and implement comparable indicators to allow better assessment of progress.
In the future, we must also develop indicators so that measures can be targeted at the right time at the right place.
We need to develop indicators that show the long-term implications of our social spending and tax decisions, in particular with regard to pensions.
Therefore, it is important to develop indicators, as pointed out in the debate, and to follow this up in a sensible way.
Two, it helps us work together and develop joint social indicators, for the first time.
The recommendation to develop indicators for public health has set us a big challenge.
This allows me to concentrate and comment on a specific aspect of the report: the need to develop indicators.
We also need to develop indicators that reflect the household level more accurately: income, consumption and wealth.
We need to develop additional indicators for measuring medium and long-term economic and social progress.
It is necessary to develop other indicators that will help explain which factors influence the living standards in a country.