Indeed, it has been a little noticed trend that today most of the
World Bank's 'public relations' type documents, most human
development related documents, and most documents arguing for the
success of the neo-liberal project use PPP *and only* PPP.  Even
where there findings would be utterly reversed by the once standard
method.  Even the introductory chapter to the World Bank's flagship
statistical publication (cited above) uses ONLY the more favorable
(and yet artificially constructed) version.  Even the Human
Development Index we have been discussing presents ONLY one version
- and this radically changes many stated conclusions.  It is not, as
if the "actual" National Income Accounts are not used in other
environments where that method would be more favorable to the Bank
or the IMF's policy objectives.  Indeed in some cases - such as
those involving debt negotiations, foreign investment, or sectoral
policies promoting the private sector, it appears (by purely casual
observation) that *only* the non-PPP version appears.

Paul

Paul, why don't you put together your notes on the PPP factor that you've posted here and publish it as an article for the general audience? -- Yoshie

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