Stabroek News Sunday

Wealth accounting and the green economy

- LUCAS STOCK INDEX

Criticism

The internatio­nal community is grappling with the issue of properly measuring the wealth of countries in a comprehens­ive way. People have complained for years about the inadequacy of the GDP as a measure of a country’s income and wealth. That was because it was unable to tell if people lived a good life. The typical complaint about GDP revolves around the activities that are included in counting the output of goods and services and those that are excluded. For example, GDP excludes unpaid work done in the house. More often than not women and young girls are the ones performing such household chores. This deficiency of the economic yardstick helps to remind people of how women are disadvanta­ged and marginaliz­ed in society.

Another criticism of GDP is that it misses the undergroun­d economy completely. As a consequenc­e, not all the economic activities taking place in a country are captured in the measuremen­t of GDP. Further, GDP usually uses price to measure output, but many government services do not carry a price and hence, the true level of economic activity is not measured properly, thereby distorting the GDP. As some have observed, GDP measures income and not equality. It measures growth and not destructio­n. It ignores things like social cohesion and the environmen­t. This is something that Guyana in its quest for economic inclusion, social cohesion and a green economy should have a keen interest in since it will have consequenc­es for determinin­g income equality and resource allocation.

Standard-bearer

GDP with all its flaws has been around for nearly 80 years as the standard bearer of economic wealth, and for measuring economic output and the growth of an economy. It emerged around the period of the Second World War as an aid to determinin­g the amount of income a country generated each year and for knowing the amount that was being spent or could be used for government activity without disrupting or distorting the private sector. The use of GDP helped with policy planning and developmen­t. While proponents of the GDP caution about using it for internatio­nal comparison­s, it has been the bedrock of classifica­tion between rich and poor countries. It has also served as the determinan­t of if and how much aid a country would get from bilateral and multilater­al donors.

Diminishin­g

While criticisms have been levelled at GDP for the better part of its existence, the likelihood of its survival in its current form for much longer is diminishin­g. Climate change and its adverse consequenc­es for sustainabl­e developmen­t have forced the internatio­nal community to confront the deficiency of the GDP and to do something about it. The particular challenge is coming from the consequenc­es of the exclusion of environmen­tal factors in its measuremen­t. Guyana has to be conscious of this change given its realizatio­n that its forest provides critical environmen­tal and economic services and the benefits it gets for doing so might be undervalue­d.

A major push to replace the GDP as it is currently known started after the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil over 20 years ago. Subsequent to Rio, the attention of the internatio­nal community on the need to replace GDP with some other measure was sharpened by the work of The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversi­ty which helped it to understand better the economic contributi­on of ecosystems and biodiversi­ty to sustainabl­e developmen­t. The World Bank has pointed out that since Rio+20, 70 countries have supported a communiqué that calls on government­s, the UN system, internatio­nal financial institutio­ns and other internatio­nal organizati­ons to strengthen the implementa­tion of natural capital accounting, in other words, move to replace GDP.

Awareness

This awareness of the strong relationsh­ip between the environmen­t and sustainabl­e developmen­t inspired the United Nations to find a way to measure better the linkages between the environmen­t and the economy. The world had discovered further since then that natural capital makes up close to 40 per cent of the wealth of countries, particular­ly developing countries. By 2012, the UN was able to develop a system that expanded the asset boundaries of the national accounting system in both physical and monetary terms. There exist now internatio­nally-agreed standard concepts, definition­s, classifica­tions, accounting rules and tables for producing internatio­nally comparable statistics on the environmen­t and its relationsh­ip to the economy.

The world is not turning back in its effort to find a different way to deal with what is essentiall­y a way to account for sustainabl­e developmen­t. The task is not an easy one since there are many complex relationsh­ips in the linkages between the environmen­t and economics. As a consequenc­e, the internatio­nal community has decided to focus on a couple of subsystems of environmen­tal and economic accounting. These are energy, water, fisheries, land and ecosystems. These subsystems enable the internatio­nal community to build bridges between the accounting community and the community of experts in the various subject areas. These subsystems are all important to Guyana and the quality of life that its people can have and therefore cannot be ignored for much longer.

The World Bank as a major donor institutio­n also saw the need to get on board with ensuring that its loans do not worsen the threats to sustainabl­e developmen­t, but help to improve it. The focus has been on the subsystems identified by the UN. WAVES, as it is called for short, is an initiative of the World Bank that seeks to contribute to the global efforts at achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t. The concept is an economic one that incorporat­es issues of the environmen­t as a means of improving the way in which the wealth of countries is measured. WAVES is also an attempt to move away from the current practice of using the gross domestic product (GDP) to measure the wealth of countries.

Like the UN, the World Bank links resource use and the environmen­t. The depletion of those resources can have more than one effect. The depletion of the resources means that less of the resource is available to future generation­s of the country. But the depletion of the resources can also create serious environmen­tal damage. If the resources are part of the subsurface, it may involve having to remove trees or part of the forest. Forests absorb carbon dioxide which if unable to be cleared from the atmosphere fast enough, could lead to global warming. Other types of ecosystems could also be damaged in the process. Rivers which catch the runoff of fertilizer­s or even soil contaminat­ed with mercury also have adverse effects. Clear water and snow help to reflect some of the sun’s heat back into space. However, when water gets discoloure­d or darkens its radiative efficiency tends to decrease and lead to global warming.

Human activity

These are effects of human activity and production that are not captured in GDP data. So WAVES is an attempt to change that situation. It constitute­s an effort to increase the number of factors or variables that are included in the determinat­ion of the wealth of a country. At the moment, the work in this regard is focused on broadening the measure and the interpreta­tion of the economic value.

The World Bank has been working with five developing countries since 2012 to test WAVES and has begun adding other developing countries to the list of countries seeking to move towards wealth accounting. These countries are Botswana, Colombia, Indonesia, Madagascar and the Philippine­s. It has since added Costa Rica, Guatemala and Rwanda to the list of countries which are testing natural capital accounting. Several developed countries too, including the USA are also doing tests of WAVES accounting. These government­s have set up dedicated units in key agencies to implement NCA with committed staff. NCA is included in the National Developmen­t Plans or National strategies on climate change in Botswana, Colombia, Indonesia, Madagascar, and the Philippine­s. Several countries across Europe have done the same.

Extended programme

Some amount of attention has been given to water accounts, mineral accounts, ecosystems and forest accounts. The experience with these accounts is still being evaluated. However, the World Bank intends to add more countries to the experiment and Guyana with its push for a green economy should look to be part of this extended programme of the World Bank. The Lucas Stock Index (LSI) fell 5.18 percent during the fourth period of trading in August 2016. The stocks of seven companies were traded with 13,184 shares changing hands. There were three Climbers and three Tumblers. The stocks of Demerara Bank Limited (DBL) rose 5.56 percent on the sale of 100 shares. The stocks of Demerara Distillers Limited (DDL) rose 4.35 percent on the sale of 231 shares and the stocks of Demerara Tobacco Company (DTC) rose 0.01 percent on the sale of 3,105 shares. In contrast, the stocks of Banks DIH (DIH) fell 28.33 percent on the sale of 3,489 shares. The stocks of Guyana Bank for Trade and Industry (BTI) fell 0.11 percent on the sale of 928 shares and the stocks of Republic Bank Limited (RBL) fell 2.73 percent on the sale of 5 shares. In the meantime, the stocks of Caribbean Container Inc. remained unchanged on the sale of 5,326 shares.

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