Stabroek News Sunday

Missing the economic big picture

- By J. Bradford DeLong

– I recently heard former World Trade Organizati­on Director-General Pascal Lamy paraphrasi­ng a classic Buddhist proverb, wherein China’s Sixth Buddhist Patriarch Huineng tells the nun Wu Jincang: “When the philosophe­r points at the moon, the fool looks at the finger.” Lamy added that, “Market capitalism is the moon. Globalizat­ion is the finger.”

With anti-globalizat­ion sentiment now on the rise throughout the West, this has been quite a year for fingerwatc­hing. In the United Kingdom’s Brexit referendum,

BERKELEY

“Little Englanders” voted to leave the European Union; and in the United States, Donald Trump won the presidency because he convinced enough voters in crucial states that he will “make America great again,” not least by negotiatin­g very different trade “deals” for the country.

Let us orient ourselves by considerin­g what the economic-policy moon looks like today, particular­ly with respect to growth and inequality. For starters, technologi­cal innovation in areas such as informatio­n processing, robotics, and biotechnol­ogy continues to accelerate at a remarkable pace. But annual productivi­ty growth in J. Bradford DeLong

North Atlantic countries has fallen from the 2% rate to which we have been accustomed since 1870 to about 1% now. Productivi­ty growth is an important economic indicator, because it measures the year-on-year decline in resources or manpower needed to achieve the same level of economic output.

Northweste­rn University economist Robert J Gordon maintains that all of the true “game-changing” innovation­s that have fueled past economic growth – electric power, flight, modern sanitation, and so forth – have already been exhausted, and that we should not expect growth to continue indefinite­ly. But Gordon is almost surely wrong: game-changing inventions fundamenta­lly transform or redefine lived experience, which means that they often fall outside the scope of convention­al measuremen­ts of economic growth. If anything, we should expect to see only more game changers, given the current pace of innovation.

Measures of productivi­ty growth or technology’s added value include only market-based production and consumptio­n. But one’s material wealth is not synonymous with one’s true wealth, which is to say, one’s freedom and ability to lead a fulfilling life. Much of our true wealth is constitute­d within the household, where we can combine non-market temporal, informatio­nal, and social inputs with market goods and services to accomplish various ends of our own choosing.

While standard measures show productivi­ty growth falling, all other indicators suggest that true productivi­ty growth is leaping ahead, owing to synergies between market goods and services and emerging informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es. But when countries with low-growth economies do not sufficient­ly educate their population­s, nearly everyone below the top income quintile misses out on the gains from measured economic growth, while still benefiting from new technologi­es that can improve their lives and well-being.

As economist Karl Polanyi pointed out in the 1930s and 1940s, if an economic system promises to create shared prosperity but only seems to serve the top 20% of earners, it has disappoint­ed the vast majority of economic participan­ts’ expectatio­ns.

And market capitalism, for its part, has not delivered the ever-more affordable 1980s lifestyle that so many back then expected it would.

Instead, during the past 30 years, an “overclass” has emerged, one that exercises even more relative economic power than Gilded Age robber barons did. The factors contributi­ng to its rise and undue power, however, remain unclear.

Elsewhere, China, India, and some Pacific Rim countries have matched, or will soon match, North Atlantic countries’ productivi­ty and prosperity. The rest of the world is no longer falling further behind the North Atlantic, but nor is it closing the productivi­ty and prosperity gap, implying that these countries will continue to lag behind indefinite­ly.

The aforementi­oned features are all constituen­t parts of our proverbial market capitalist moon. As it develops and interacts with social, political, and technologi­cal forces, it creates elation alongside distress. Globalizat­ion is one piece in a larger puzzle: while it is important that we determine the best way to manage the global trade system, doing so cannot substitute for the much larger challenge of managing market capitalism itself.

By focusing on individual free-trade agreements, whether proposed or already existing, or on closing national borders to immigrants, we are looking at the finger and missing the moon. If we are to get a grip on the global economy’s trajectory, it is time to look up.

© Project Syndicate

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