RT info:eu-repo/semantics/article T1 Deep‑Rooted Culture and Economic Development: Taking the Seven Deadly Sins to Build a Well‑Being Composite Indicator A1 Herrero Prieto, Luis César A1 Boal San Miguel, Iván A1 Gómez Vega, Mafalda K1 Cultural identity K1 Welfare indicators K1 Economic development K1 Synthetic indicators K1 Deadly sins K1 Europe K1 5308 Economía General AB This work involves undertaking a reappraisal of the Seven Deadly Sins in order to construct synthetic indicators of well-being aimed at measuring spatial economic disparities and their link to economic development. The Seven Deadly Sins constitute a way of describing vices vis-à-vis Christian moral education. Yet they might also be viewed as general norms of social behaviour and interpreted today as notions related to the concept of well-being. For example, the level of concentration of wealth (greed), sustainability of resources (gluttony), safety index (wrath), problems adapting to the labour market or workplace absenteeism (sloth), etc. The Seven Deadly Sins have also yielded emblematic examples of artistic iconography and cultural production. How they are perceived and expressed may also differ depending on each group’s cultural idiosyncrasy, in the sense of a series of beliefs and attitudes forged over the centuries. Based on these premises, the current work first seeks to compile variables that reflect each conceptual dimension so as to later construct a synthetic indicator of well-being with territorial disaggregation. This enables us to explore spatial disparities and the extent to which they relate to economic development. This is applied to a group of countries in the European Union with NUTS 2 territorial disaggregation (regions). The sources of information are basically Eurostat. The method involves applying Data Envelopment Analysis to construct the synthetic indicator, and spatial econometrics to pinpoint spatial dependence effects. PB Springer Nature SN 0303-8300 YR 2019 FD 2019 LK https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/69796 UL https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/69796 LA eng NO Social Indicator Research, 2019, vol. 144, p. 601–624 NO Producción Científica DS UVaDOC RD 22-nov-2024