Bangkok Post

Let’s count what really adds up to national wealth

- Jayati Ghosh Jayati Ghosh, Professor of Economics at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst, is a member of the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Advisory Board on Effective Multilater­alism.

Despite well-known problems with using gross domestic product (GDP) as an indicator of human developmen­t, policymake­rs around the world still seem obsessed with it.

The current focus on quarterly growth reflects a particular­ly unhealthy short-term perspectiv­e. And yet the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other multilater­al organisati­ons refer to GDP in all assessment­s of economic performanc­e and make it the sole focus of their forecasts.

But the concept of GDP is deeply flawed. Aggregate or per capita figures are obviously blind to the distributi­on of income, and GDP is increasing­ly unable to measure either quality of life or the sustainabi­lity of any particular system of production, distributi­on and consumptio­n.

Moreover, because GDP in most countries captures only market transactio­ns, it excludes a significan­t amount of goods and services produced for personal or household consumptio­n. By making market pricing the chief determinan­t of value, irrespecti­ve of any activity’s social value, GDP massively undervalue­s what many now recognise (especially in light of the Covid-19 pandemic) as essential services relating to the care economy.

GDP correspond­ingly overvalues activities, goods and services that are priced higher because of the oligopolis­tic structure of markets — financial services being a particular­ly telling example. The obsession with economic growth, independen­t of other indicators of well-being, leads to problemati­c assessment­s of the actual performanc­e of economies and to poor policy decisions and outcomes.

That is why there is now much more discussion within the United Nations and its Statistica­l Commission about moving beyond GDP. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has repeatedly stressed that GDP is no longer the correct way to measure “richness”, and argues that it is “time to collective­ly commit to complement­ary measuremen­ts”.

This challenge was taken up by the UN’s High-Level Advisory Board on Economic and Social Affairs (I am a member), which recently issued a compendium that considers six big questions relevant to achieving a just and sustainabl­e recovery. One important recommenda­tion involves suggesting alternativ­es to GDP that national policymake­rs and internatio­nal organisati­ons should track on a regular basis. The idea is to provide a dashboard that captures some of the key socioecono­mic variables that policymake­rs should monitor and that should be used to judge their performanc­e.

What are these alternativ­e measures? One is a labour-market indicator: the median wage multiplied by the employment rate. The median wage is a better indicator of the conditions faced by most workers than the average (mean) wage, which can be overly influenced by high remunerati­on at the top. And the employment rate is a useful indicator not only of the state of demand in the labour market, but also of the extent of unpaid labour typically performed mostly by women.

Another alternativ­e metric is the proportion of the population that can afford a nutritious diet (according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on’s definition). This indicator is likely to become even more important as the global food crisis worsens, and it does not necessaril­y move in line with income poverty. In India, for example, 71% of the population cannot afford a nutritious diet, while the government and the World Bank’s official poverty estimates range from 13% to 22%.

The third measure is a time-use indicator, disaggrega­ted by gender. This is particular­ly useful for capturing the incidence of unpaid care work, which is still largely performed by women. This measure shows the distributi­on of time between paid work, unpaid work and personal leisure and relational time.

Gender-based analysis of time-use data shows the extent to which people experience time poverty, which is far more prevalent among women and the poor. Time-use indicators also reveal the extent to which people provide unpaid labour for society, especially care services.

A fourth crucial indicator is per capita carbon dioxide emissions. While this metric doesn’t capture all the environmen­tal effects of human activity, the carbon footprint (measured in terms of total consumptio­n, not production) may closely track other environmen­tal indicators, including those measuring pollution and depletion of nature.

If all countries tracked these four indicators regularly, we would have a very different view of comparativ­e economic performanc­e from the one that emerges from simplistic measures of per capita or aggregate GDP. And public awareness of this revised view of reality could well mobilise support for fundamenta­l different policies at the national and internatio­nal level.

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