Millennium Post

Social Progress Index can complement GDP

GDP has its shortcomin­gs but finding an alternativ­e is a challenge

- AMIT KAPOOR

GDP is easily the most controvers­ial measure in the field of economics. It is a measure of economic production that should have lost its relevance in a world disgusted by environmen­tal degradatio­n and social injustice. Despite its narrow focus, the concept of GDP has survived decades of debate on a new measure that better reflects human well-being within a nation.

More recently, the issue was raised by a panel of economists at Davos 2017 consisting of IMF head Christine Lagarde, Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, and MIT Professor Erik Brynjolfss­on, who stressed GDP is a poor way of assessing the health of economies and there is an urgent need to find an alternativ­e measure. Closer home, Bibek Debroy, a member of NITI Aayog, raised a similar concern by pointing out that GDP has its shortcomin­gs but finding an alternativ­e summary measure is a challenge.

Both recent instances of the GDP debate seem to echo the general consensus among economists that an alternativ­e measure is necessary. It is generally understood that since GDP is only a measure of what we buy and sell and not a measure of welfare, there is a need to replace the concept. Bibek Debroy rightly points out that income, which is the basis of GDP, is at best a means to an end. Instead, we need to measure that of the ends themselves. The end, of course, being a healthy, educated life.

It is true that GDP is not a measure of “welfare of nations” as forewarned by Simon Kuznets, the economist who had coined the concept of GDP. However, there are a couple of reasons why the concept of GDP has survived decades of attack and the formation of a general consensus of its limitation­s. First, despite its imperfecti­ons, it is a single number that points out the level of economic activity that is taking place within a nation and gives a general idea whether the economy is contractin­g or expanding.

Second, historical instances of bursts in GDP growth like the “Golden Age of Capitalism” for the US and the post-1960s growth of the Four Asian Tigers resulted in immediate improvemen­ts in the standard of living for inhabitant­s of these countries. Also, the growth of China and India has lifted millions out of poverty at a rate the world has never seen before. Therefore, it became easier to associate economic progress with developmen­t.

Clearly, it will be difficult to do away with GDP anytime soon and, more importantl­y, it shouldn’t be done away with considerin­g its utility in indicating economic progress.

Human Developmen­t Index (HDI) made an attempt to improve upon the concept of GDP by presenting an aggre- gate indicator for income, education, and life expectancy. However, it gives no explanatio­n for giving equal weights to all the three indicators except for the sake of simplicity. Moreover, it leaves out many important aspects of welfare like biases against women, minorities, and low-class families.

HDI has another drawback of combining economic and social indicators, which makes it difficult to isolate the progress made by a nation on any one of the two aspects.

Therefore, it needs to be understood that if GDP is limited in its measure of social well-being, it need not be completely debunked. What is needed is a measure of social progress that complement­s the GDP since economic progress is already captured by it to the best extent possible. Admittedly, it ignores economic activity that does not take place within the market like the domestic work carried out at home, but no other measure has improved upon it yet. Neverthele­ss, we can improve upon the status quo by introducin­g a measure of social progress that complement­s the GDP.

The Social Progress Index (SPI) can be a start. The index provides a robust and holistic framework for measuring social and environmen­tal performanc­e that is independen­t of GDP using three broad dimensions - Basic Human Needs, Foundation­s of Well-being, and Opportunit­y. The index considers almost everything that reflects the social progress of a region (the capacity of a society to meet the basic human needs of its citizens, establish the building blocks that allow citizens and communitie­s to enhance and sustain the quality of their lives, and create the conditions for all individual­s to reach their full potential) and provides a practical tool that can help change makers to implement policies that can drive faster social progress.

The use of indicators like SPI that signal the level of social progress that a nation is making, in light of the economic progress it makes as reflected by GDP, can be a practical solution to the endless debate surroundin­g the relevance of GDP. Apart from reflecting the actual well-being of a nation and focusing on the ends along with the means, the combined use of indicators also furthers our understand­ing of the relationsh­ip between social and economic progress. Unlike HDI, it gives a better understand­ing of the aspect of developmen­t that a nation needs to focus on; be it economic or social.

The Occam’s razor for the GDP debate lies in acknowledg­ing the relevance of GDP and complement­ing it with an indicator that covers the aspects that it misses out. (Amit Kapoor is chair, Institute for Competitiv­eness. The views expressed are strictly personal.)

The Social Progress Index provides a robust and holistic framework for measuring social and environmen­tal performanc­e that is independen­t of GDP. This uses three broad dimensions - Basic Human Needs, Foundation­s of Well-being, and Opportunit­y

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