Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

GDP should be corrected, not replaced

- By Urs Rohner

ZURICH – Respected economists have long pointed out that gross domestic product is an inadequate measure of economic developmen­t and social well- being, and thus should not be policymake­rs’ sole fixation. Yet we have not gotten any closer to finding a feasible alternativ­e to GDP.

One well- known shortcomin­g of GDP is that it disregards the value of housework, including care for children and elderly family members. More important, assigning a monetary value to such activities would not address a deeper flaw in GDP: its inability to reflect adequately the lived experience of individual members of society. Correcting for housework would inflate GDP, while making no real difference to living standards. And the women who make up a predominan­t share of people performing housework would continue to be treated as volunteers, rather than as genuine economic contributo­rs.

Another well-known flaw of GDP is that it does not account for value destructio­n, such as when countries mismanage their human capital by withholdin­g education from certain demographi­c groups, or by depleting natural resources for immediate economic benefit. All told, GDP tends to measure assets imprecisel­y, and liabilitie­s not at all.

Still, while no internatio­nal consensus on an alternativ­e to GDP has emerged, there has been encouragin­g progress toward a more considered way of thinking about economic activity. In 1972, Yale University economists William Nordhaus and James Tobin proposed a new framework, the “measure of economic welfare” (MEW), to account for sundry unpaid activities. And, more recently, China establishe­d a “green developmen­t” index, which considers economic performanc­e alongside various environmen­tal factors.

Moreover, public- and private-sector decision- makers now have far more tools for making sophistica­ted choices than they did in the past. On the investor side, demand for environmen­tal, social, and governance data is rising steeply. And in the public sector, organisati­ons such as the World Bank have adopted metrics other than GDP to assess quality of life, including life expectancy at birth and access to education.

At the same time, the debate around gross national income has been gaining steam. Though it shares fundamenta­l elements with GDP, GNI is more relevant to our globalised age, because it adjusts for income generated by foreign-owned corporatio­ns and foreign residents. Accordingl­y, in a country where foreign corporatio­ns own a significan­t share of manufactur­ing and other assets, GDP will be inflated, whereas GNI shows only income the country actually retains.

Ireland is a prominent example of how GNI has been used to correct for distortion­s in GDP. In 2015, Ireland’s reported GDP increased by an eye- popping 26.3 per cent. As an October 2016 OECD working paper noted, the episode raised serious questions about the “ability of the conceptual accounting framework used to define GDP to adequately reflect economic reality”.

The OECD paper went on to conclude that GDP is not a reliable indicator of a country’s material well-being. In Ireland’s case, its single year of astonishin­g GDP growth was due to multinatio­nal corporatio­ns “relocating” certain economic gains – namely, the returns on intellectu­al property – in their overall accounting. To address the growing disparity between actual economic developmen­t and reported GDP, the Irish Central Statistics Office introduced a modified version of GNI (known as GNI*) for 2016.

The gap between GDP and GNI will likely close soon in other jurisdicti­ons, too. In a recent working paper, Urooj Khan of Columbia Business School, Suresh Nallareddy of Duke University, and Ethan Rouen of Harvard Business School highlight a misalignme­nt in “the growth in corporate profits and the overall US economy” between 1975 and 2013. They find that, during that period, average corporate-profit growth outpaced GDP growth whenever the domestic corporate-income-tax rate exceeded that of other OECD countries.

In late December, this disconnect was addressed with the passage of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. By lowering the corporate-tax rate to a globally competitiv­e level and granting better terms for repatriati­ng profits, the tax package is expected to shift corporate earnings back to the US. As a result, the divergence between GDP and GNI will likely close in both the US and Ireland, where many major US corporatio­ns have been holding cash.

Looking ahead, I would suggest that policymake­rs focus on three points. First, as demonstrat­ed above, the relevant stakeholde­rs are already addressing several of the flaws in GDP, which is encouragin­g. Second, public- and private- sector decision- makers now have a multitude of instrument­s available for better assessing the social and environmen­tal ramificati­ons of their actions.

And, third, in business one must not let the perfect become the enemy of the good. We have not solved all of the problems associated with GDP, but we have come a long way in reducing many of its distortion­s. Instead of seeking a new, disruptive framework to replace current data and analytical techniques, we should focus on making thoughtful, incrementa­l changes to the existing system.

(The writer is Chairman of the Board of Credit Suisse. Article courtesy Project Syndicate, 2018)

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