A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Nov 11, 2013

GDP Isn't Good Enough: Why We Need a Better Measure for the Real Economy

A year ago we had Hurricane Sandy. This week we are staring at images of the destruction wrought by Supertyphoon Haiyan. In each case, a central element of the debate about the lasting effect of the event centers on what the economic impact may be.

The data is in on Sandy: it supposedly raised GDP, meaning it was 'good' for the economy. It would not be surprising to find a year from now that Haiyan was 'good' for the Philippines.

In either case, one suspects, as the following article points out, that the thousands of people displaced or still grappling with the loss of loved ones, homes, jobs and cherished possessions are unlikely to share that optimistic mindset.

The reality is that GDP ignores environmental, social, emotional, entrepreneurial, political, educational, familial and a host of other factors that have a very real impact on the performance of the socio-economic structures involved. Most of these factors are intangible: they are recognizable and significant, but since they are not captured in the sclerotic accounting measures by which economic success or failure is measured, they are not reflected in the final tally.

We use crude and incomplete metrics because they are convenient: they have some history which provides a basis for comparison with the past and they are less likely to stir bitter ideological debates about what should be measured, arguments usually spurred by the moral and financial positions of those doing the jawing.

Until nations begin to capture this data and analyze it properly, pronouncements about impacts, effects and solutions will be as unrealistic as the assessments themselves. JL

Ben Beachy, Michael Shank and Justin Dorn comment in The Atlantic:

If Hurricane Sandy, which struck a year ago, was technically "good" for the country, we need a better way to measure national progress.


One year ago, Hurricane Sandy ravaged much of the (US) eastern seaboard, leaving tens of thousands of families homeless and nearly as many businesses shuttered.  Yet, by many estimates, the hurricane was good for the economy. It likely raised GDP—our Gross Domestic Product.
This might seem alarming, but it's hardly surprising.  The massive oil spill resulting from the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico also registered as a plus for the economy in terms of GDP, thanks to activity associated with cleanup and rebuilding. Calamitous events that destroy lives and livelihoods can look good to our nation’s headline growth metric. Despite the destruction of homes and private property, the process of rebuilding a city or state after it suffers from devastation requires new spending that shows up as higher economic activity in GDP figures.
While GDP is just fine at its official objective of measuring short-term aggregate economic output, when it serves as a proxy for progress it becomes deeply problematic. Not only does it discount the losses of national tragedies like Sandy, but also it ignores levels of personal and public debt, pollution and security, innovation and entrepreneurship, and fails to reflect the long-term value of preventive healthcare or educational achievement.  As a crude tally of spending, it doesn’t measure what matters in people's lives: real take-home pay, health, education, family time, environmental quality, or safety.
We need a measure that captures human welfare, which means quantifying natural capital, financial capital, creative capital, human capital, and social and organizational capital.  While the US Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis added some elements of intellectual capital to GDP this year —including a fuller accounting for arts, entertainment, and some research and development activities—these additions are just a start. 


Advancements in data collection, statistics, and computing have made it possible to upgrade this decades-old indicator.  Governments are now drawing on the work of leading economists to implement measures that can lay serious claim to a nation's welfare. Germany, France, and the United Kingdom, for example, have already started drafting holistic national indicators.
In this country, the state of Maryland has led the way by launching the Genuine Progress Indicator, a more comprehensive, longer-term measure of state-level welfare.  Maryland added 26 new policy concerns to the calculation of raw output–from the cost of commuting (which can have significant health effects) to the value of higher education–and is being joined by states including Vermont, Oregon, and Utah in adopting more relevant measures.
The barriers to adopting a national "well-being" index might be more political than technical. We have the means to collect data on health, education, and life satisfaction, but it will be a stretch for today's parties, fresh from a government shutdown and debt ceiling crisis, to agree on indicators. For example, Washington, which can't even bring itself to limit subsidies for oil and gas companies, would have to decide whether the new measurements should subtract the costs of air pollution. Congress would have to decide how to count the costs of family breakdown, or add the value of volunteer services, in addition to assigning a weight to each of these factors.
If Congress cannot come to agreement on all these questions, there is another way forward.  A bipartisan commission of top economic experts can determine the specifics of a new system of national indicators.  The expert commission–appointed by Congress, vetted by the leaders of both parties, and guided by public input–could achieve this goal by taking some of the politics out of the business of statistics.
There’s bipartisan incentive to fix GDP.  The indicator fails economic conservatives (by failing to properly account for debt), progressives (by failing to account for inequality), environmentalists (by failing to account for pollution), businesspeople (by failing to account for entrepreneurship), and social conservatives (by failing to account for time spent with family).  Nearly all players have a stake in seeing some improvement to the system.
A new commission would not set out to replace GDP's data collection process, but rather to improve and expand it. Similar to how we measure unemployment with a series of six distinct measures known as U1 through U6, we could start reporting GDP as a series of measures – say, G1 through G5 – to paint a fuller picture of how the country is faring.
The new set of indicators could provide a more comprehensive set of gauges for U.S. policymakers. Imagine measurements that account for U.S. economic realities such as wage mobility and consumer debt, that track the extent to which our country is investing in long-term economic growth, and that assess progress on shared goals such as low crime rates, clean water, and high life expectancy.
Members of Congress need such information to make informed decisions for the well-being of the country.  And we all need such information to hold them accountable to that task. GDP, as we know it, served a useful role in the 20th century when national progress depended more upon industrial output.  But now, our priorities are more complex.  It's time to adjust our numbers accordingly.

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