Thursday, October 8, 2015

GDP - The Worst Way to Measure a Country's Progress

Which is better for a country’s well-being: $10 million spent constructing a jail, or $10 million spent producing a line of smartphones? How about clear-cutting rain forests to produce $10 million in lumber? Or a storm that requires $10 million in repairs?

Using today’s most common shorthand of national welfare, gross domestic product, all of the above are equal. GDP measures only output, and makes no claims on the quality of that output, let alone on subjective concepts such as social progress or human happiness. It does what it was intended to do -- offer a value of marketed goods and services produced in a country in a given time frame -- and does it reasonably well.

As useful as GDP is, it has some crucial flaws. It can obscure growing inequality and encourage the depletion of resources. It can’t differentiate between spending on good things (education) and terrible things (cigarettes). It doesn’t measure the economic services that nature provides, such as the dwindling wetlands that once protected New Orleans from storms, or those that don’t come with a market price, such as raising children. It fails to account for the value of social cohesion, education, health, leisure, a clean environment -- in other words, as Robert Kennedy once put it, GDP measures everything “except that which makes life worthwhile.”

SOME IMPROVEMENTS
This is why more and more economists and activists are pushing to update GDP. The risk, though, is trying to incorporate too much into one indicator -- particularly when it comes to subjective measures such as happiness or well-being. A far better approach would be to improve some of the measurements used in national accounts, and develop a wider range of individual indicators of welfare to inform public policy.

In doing so, here are four guidelines to keep in mind.

First, economists need faster access to accurate information about growth, especially during recessions. Consider that the original estimate of GDP growth for the fourth quarter of 2008 was a contraction of 3.8 percent. Over several years that figure was revised to 8.9 percent -- suggesting a much more severe recession than most people realized in early 2009 when Congress was debating President Barack Obama’s stimulus bill. Several researchers, notably Jeremy Nalewaik of the Federal Reserve, have said that gross domestic income had suggested the onset of the recession earlier and with greater accuracy than GDP had. Nalewaik and several co-authors argued that a combined GDP-GDI measure would be more accurate, helping to offset some of the measurement errors that inhere in GDP and ideally giving policy makers a better economic picture when it most counts.

Second, we should take better account of non-market production -- like household work -- that affects the economy. The Bureau of Economic Analysis, which compiles the national-income accounts of the U.S., has done an admirable job in recent years of using “satellite accounts” to take a more comprehensive snapshot of the economy. These enable experimentation with what data the bureau collects, without jeopardizing the credibility of the existing national accounts.
For instance, a recent study calculated a satellite account for household production -- including non-market domestic services such as gardening and housework, returns on consumer durable goods, and return on government capital -- and found that GDP would have been 26 percent larger in 2010 if it had included such criteria. The study also found that the historical annual growth rate of GDP would have been slower and measures of income inequality would have been lower. Although such data necessarily entail uncertainty, they can still offer illuminating detail that’s missing from traditional measures.

EDUCATION, HEALTH??

Third, because GDP measures average income, it can obscure important discrepancies at the household level. When incomes rise disproportionately for the well-to-do, for instance, mean income can increase even though many regular workers see their paychecks cut. As a report from the think tank Demos recently noted, although U.S. GDP more than doubled over the past 30 years, median household income grew by only 16 percent. One possible solution, which the authors support: Create new measures of household data for disposable income to better capture families’ welfare and buying power.

Fourth, economists are generally converging on the idea that some measurement of environmental impact could be added to GDP. The current system doesn’t account for pollution, the depletion of natural resources or the economic benefits nature can provide. Fortunately, data on environmental accounting are improving, and it’s possible, statistically if not politically, to place a monetary value on environmental depletion that could be subtracted from GDP. One way to begin might be to experiment with satellite environmental accounts.

What about measures of social well-being? This information is important, but measures proposed as a replacement or improvement to GDP, such as the Genuine Progress Indicator, typically suffer by including ideological or subjective criteria. Better to collect such data as part of a limited dashboard of additional indicators -- on health, the environment, social cohesion and so on -- that is separate from GDP. This is the approach recommended by the Stiglitz Commission, which did exhaustive work on this subject for the French government.

GDP is a universal, objective and very useful measurement. But we should recognize its limitations. Increasing GDP shouldn’t be governments’ only objective. Nor should GDP be considered a definitive measurement of human welfare. For that, we’ll have to expand our data. And, ultimately, hold our politicians to better account.


From: BloombergView.com 

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sir, I think that GDP should look in other sectors as well coming out of its comfort zone areas. Like after 1991 liberalization GDP has increased a lot and today it's 3.33% of the world and 7.0% of India. It clearly shows that we have achieved certain goals like in employment - we now readily employ women's in different sectors at par with men. Also education it has reached 74.04% (2011) from 65.38% (2001) but then also we have much scope to increase our GDP by making progress in other unknown sectors. Like, we can promote housewives also to engage in some work rather than wasting it pointlessly, this will also help in increasing our GDP. We can also promote unorganized sector work. Like, we can change the traditional methods of the persons doing that work. I think, only we need to do some innovation. It can do the rest on its own.

Anonymous said...

Its rightlybstated above that though GDP is a very good measurment still it is backed by many flaws.On one hand it counts the imputed value of a house owned by a person but on the other hand it fails to calulate the value of manybother thigs which are not exactly in economic terms.For eg. it fails to calculateband include the value of education that a mother gives to her child instead of sending him or her to tuition classes.Similarly,if I grow vegetabkes for my consumption in my kitchen,garden,then,that will also not be calculated.These are some basic flaws.As we are heading towards a more and more speific world we need some changes to be exected in our system of GDP.

Unknown said...

Dear Srishti and Sakshi,

Nice analysis.

As per Srishti, new measures to account different sectors need to be developed. We will discuss alternatives to GDP in class...Also, my considered opinion is, the work done by housewives is equally important and must be accounted for. Work done by domestic workers and allied unorganized work should be part of GDP calculations.

Sakshi has brought out the point about items not calculated in GDP. many non economic but very valuable assets such as environment, health education and their quality is given no weightage under GDP. These flaws have reduced the value of GDP or has highly inflated the figures; giving rise to wrong judgements about the progress of the nation and its people.

I take this as a background to the class discussion...Keep posting comments and share your ideas.

Warm Regards,
Arun

aviral thakre said...

When computing GDP, goods and services sold in the marke are valued at market prices. However, some goods are not sold in the market, and these do not have market prices. Thus the value of these items has to be estimated. In case of housing when people rent housing, their rent is counted as part of GDP,as it is both income (for the landlord) and expenditure (on the part of the tenant). For people who live in their own homes, an estimated market value for the rent that would be paid for the property if they were renting it is computed.Whilst the value of housing services are imputed, the value of other durable goods, e.g. the cost, or ‘rent paid’ towards running cars, fridges and other durable goods are notaccounted for in GDP. Additionally, if outputs are produced which do not make it to the marketplace, such as meals cooked athome, these are not included in GDP either. The fact that these items are not included means that GDP may understate economic well-being. For example, a meal produced at home is no different from meals cooked in a restaurant, but the latter is included in GDP whilst the former is not. Therefore GDP is deficient at showing the full gamut of what people in an economy may produce, thus understating the level of economic well-being.

Anonymous said...

Exactly, GDP lacks subjectivity and is limited in its information disclosure .
Just measuring or being concerned about the monetary transactions and that too being unmindful of where we are spending the money seems trivial.
Also considering or associating higher GDP with graeter welfare is a bad idea.
GDP may also be influenced by price changes like inflation ,deflation the worst part is that it ignores that how the income is distributed or on what it is spent ,which actually is very imp. For determining welfare.
Its right to say that the GDP measure and disclosure has to e made more subjective and appropriate changes need to be incorporated.

Anonymous said...

According to me GDP per capita conveys information about productivity. But this is not correct. It is often thought that average labour productivity of a country is identical to GDP per capita. But a correct productivity measurement needs to be related to the number of hours worked, which varies between countries, as well as over time. GDP per hour is a more useful indicator of productivity than GDP per capita. It might be interpreted as an indication of freedom, power, or even potential welfare.
Besides GDP, there can be some other alternatives like
• The Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) is an economic indicator intended to replace the Gross Domestic Product, which is the main macroeconomic indicator of System of National Accounts (SNA).
• Sustainable Net Benefit Index (SNBI) ,these indicators represent a correction of the regular GDP by repairing important deficiencies through adding or subtracting certain partially-calculated money amounts to/from GDP.
• Sustainable national income, (SNI) is an indicator for environmental sustainability, which gives an estimate of the production level at which - with the technology in the year of calculation - environmental functions remain available ‘for ever’.

Anonymous said...

All good things are associated with some bad ones too. GDP was introduced in the very first place to indicate the economic development that a country has in a financial year. This very thought led to the introduction of GDP as a tool to measure the economy.

If one says that GDP does not measure the health or education status of the country or to know that whether the money being spent is for good cause or bad, then it is too much to expect from one tool of measurement. Claiming that it does not consider the aspects of social well-being is cant. If one wants to study those aspects then there are other indices prevailing for that purpose.

For eg., The Human Development Index (HDI) introduced by Amartya Sen. It indicates life expectancy, education, and per capita income which is widely accepted by the world. And other indices such as Happiness Index, Global Peace Index, etc. So one can easily study these along with GDP for a better and fairer view of the country.

Indeed, GDP shouldn’t be government’s only objective and its priority should be welfare of the people. But, GDP has its own importance and comes with its own pros and cons.

Anonymous said...

Respected sir after reading your article I want to substantiate it. by adding one more point that is there are several things that GDP does not measure that are essential for both the economy and society. Most glaringly, GDP does not capture the distribution of growth and, as a result, cannot reflect inequality.GDP also does not capture the value added by volunteer work, and does not capture the value of caring for one’s own children. For example, if a family hires someone for childcare, that counts in GDP accounting. If a parent stays home to care for their child, however, the value is not counted in GDP.