national income prosperity

An Explanation of GDP, GNP, GPI, and All That
GPI GDP GNP gross domestic product

We often hear of Gross Domestic Product, or GDP. Is that a statistic too complex for us to understand? Or is it a fake statistic manipulated by corrupt bureaucrats? Let's get the straight truth.

The Progress Report is pleased to present a guest article by Edward J. Dodson, head of the School of Cooperative Individualism. We invite the reactions, replies and responses of all our readers.

Should We Pay Attention to Statistics on "Gross Domestic Product”?

by Edward J. Dodson
April, 2005

For most of us who get our news regarding the economy from the daily newspaper, radio or television news programs, we are likely to read or hear that the economy is doing well or poorly as measured by changes in something called “Gross Domestic Product,” or “GDP.” So, exactly what is GDP and is it something that tells much of anything important?

GDP is generally defined as “the measure of the USA's output of goods and services.” The U.S. Department of Commerce gathers data from various sources on personal consumption, government expenditures, private investment, inventory growth and the nation's trade balance to come up with a GDP figure.

Additionally, the component elements in the GDP calculation are given various weights based on the relative prices of goods and services and their importance in the economy. This figure is then further adjusted to take into account the effects of inflation, yielding what economists refer to as the “inflation-corrected GDP.”

Just looking at what is included in the calculation of GDP suggests just how inappropriate (i.e., unscientific) this measurement is of anything related to the well-being of the people in a society. All spending -- whether on the construction of prisons, the development of military weaponry, the dumping of untreated and toxic chemicals into the ground, waterways or air -- all add to GDP. An alternative approach has been developed by environmental economists working with the Greens, referred to as the “Genuine Progress Indicator,” or “GPI.”

GPI takes into consideration whether the output of goods and services of a society is positively impacting the well-being of the population. The expenditures on criminal justice and pollution clean-up, for example, are deducted from total increases in spending to assess whether there is a net improvement or net decline in social welfare. Other components look at the extent to which production occurs utilizing sustainable processes that are not harmful to the environment. Here's a graphic image of just how far off GPI suggests we are from what the GDP measures.

Critics point out that the GDP measure was created during the Second World War in an effort to keep track of wartime production gains. The purpose was never to use this as a measure of our wellbeing and social progress. A report issued in 1995 by the San Francisco-based organization Redefining Progress offers a detailed analysis of GDP's inconsistencies:

Our nightly news programs are apt to dedicate a few minutes at most to the state of the economy. It is very tempting to use a simplistic indicator, such as GDP, to provide viewers and listeners with a sense that things are going well or are turning downward. Are people fooled? Well, as the old saying goes: “When our neighbor is unemployed, we conclude we are in a recession. When we are unemployed, we conclude we are in a depression.” The GPI represents a major improvement in the way statistical information is interpreted to describe trends and the state of reality.

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Ed Dodson runs the School of Cooperative Individualism.

Also see:

Housing Costs and Land Values -- The Deepening Wedge
http://www.progress.org/2004/dodson11.htm

Time is Money (Or is it?)
http://www.progress.org/rant07.htm

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