https://medium.com/@Inflab/is-gdp-a-good-measure-of-economic-well-being-7ad449ded139


 *Is GDP a Good Measure of Economic Well-Being?*
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Jul 9, 2018
<https://medium.com/@Inflab/is-gdp-a-good-measure-of-economic-well-being-7ad449ded139>
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GDP measures both the economy’s total income and the economy’s total
expenditure on goods and services. Thus, GDP per person tells us the income
and expenditure of the average person in the economy. Because most people
would prefer to receive higher income and enjoy higher expenditure, GDP per
person seems a natural measure of the economic well-being of the average
individual.

Yet some people dispute the validity of GDP as a measure of well-being.
When Senator Robert Kennedy was running for president in 1968, he gave a
moving critique of such economic measures:

[Gross domestic product] does not allow for the health of our children, the
quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include
the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligence
of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures
neither our courage, nor our wisdom, nor our devotion to our country. It
measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile, and
it can tell us everything about America except why we are proud that we are
Americans.

Much of what Robert Kennedy said is correct. Why, then, do we care about
GDP?

The answer is that a large GDP does in fact help us to lead good lives. GDP
does not measure the health of our children, but nations with larger GDP
can afford better healthcare for their children. GDP does not measure the
quality of their education, but nations with larger GDP can afford better
educational systems. GDP does not measure the beauty of our poetry, but
nations with larger GDP can afford to teach more of their citizens to read
and enjoy poetry. GDP does not take account of our intelligence, integrity,
courage, wisdom, or devotion to country, but all of these laudable
attributes are easier to foster when people are less concerned about being
able to afford the material necessities of life. In short, GDP does not
directly measure those things that make life worthwhile, but it does
measure our ability to obtain many of the inputs into a worthwhile life.

GDP is not, however, a perfect measure of well-being. Some things that
contribute to a good life are left out of GDP. One is leisure. Suppose, for
instance, that everyone in the economy suddenly started working every day
of the week, rather than enjoying leisure on weekends. More goods and
services would be produced, and GDP would rise. Yet despite the increase in
GDP, we should not conclude that everyone would be better off. The loss
from reduced leisure would offset the gain from producing and consuming a
greater quantity of goods and services.

Because GDP uses market prices to value goods and services, it excludes the
value of almost all activity that takes place outside markets. In
particular, GDP omits the value of goods and services produced at home.
When a chef prepares a delicious meal and sells it at her restaurant, the
value of that meal is part of GDP. But if the chef prepares the same meal
for her family, the value she has added to the raw ingredients is left out
of GDP. Similarly, child care provided in day-care centers is part of GDP,
whereas child care by parents at home is not. Volunteer work also
contributes to the well-being of those in society, but GDP does not reflect
these contributions.

Another thing that GDP excludes is the quality of the environment. Imagine
that the government eliminated all environmental regulations. Firms could
then produce goods and services without considering the pollution they
create, and GDP might rise. Yet well-being would most likely fall. The
deterioration in the quality of air and water would more than offset the
gains from greater production.

GDP also says nothing about the distribution of income. A society in which
100 people have annual incomes of $50,000 has GDP of $5 million and, not
surprisingly, GDP per person of $50,000. So does a society in which 10
people earn $500,000 and 90 suffer with nothing at all. Few people would
look at those two situations and call them equivalent. GDP per person tells
us what happens to the average person, but behind the average lies a large
variety of personal experiences.

In the end, we can conclude that GDP is a good measure of economic
wellbeing for most — but not all — purposes. It is important to keep in
mind what GDP includes and what it leaves out.

via: Principles of Economics
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