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By Ron Colman
There is no more pervasive and dangerous illusion in our
society than the equation of economic growth, as measured
by GDP, with well being and prosperity.
This was not the intention of those who created the GDP.
Simon Kuznets, its principal architect, warned 40 years ago:
The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement
of national income....Goals for `more' growth should specify
of what and for what.
Our growth statistics were never meant to be used as a measure
of progress, as they are today.
Are we "better off" as a result of decades of continuous
economic growth? Certainly we have bigger houses and more
cars, appliances, and home entertainment equipment. We are
also less peaceful and secure, three times more likely to
be victims of crime than our parents a generation ago. We
are more time stressed. Average unemployment rates have risen
each decade. Our jobs are more insecure. Our debt levels are
higher. Real incomes are declining. Child poverty is increasing.
And economists predict that, for the first time since the
Industrial Revolution, the next generation will be worse off
than the present one.
More dangerously, blind growth has undermined our natural
resource wealth, produced massive pollution, and changed the
climate in a way that now threatens the planet. Are we happier?
A recent U.S. poll found that 72% of Americans had more possessions
than their parents, but less than half said they were happier
than their parents.
Natural Resources De-Valued
Activities that degrade our quality of life, like crime, pollution
and addictive gambling, make the economy grow. The more fish
we sell and the more trees we cut down, the more the economy
grows. We assign no value to the natural resources on which
our economic wealth is ultimately based, and we count their
depletion as gain in our growth statistics. This is like a
factory owner selling off his machinery and counting it as
profit, with no regard to the reduced flow of goods and services
in the future?
Growth is simply a quantitative increase in the physical
scale of the economy, and tells us nothing about our actual
well being. The obsession with growth and its confusion with
genuine development and quality of life have sent misleading
signals to leaders and public alike, distorted policy priorities,
blunted effective remedial action for social and environmental
problems, and led us down a dangerous and self-destructive
path.
The alternative is no mystery. In fact, there is a remarkable
social consensus on fundamental values and on the goals that
signify genuine progress. We all want a safer and more peaceful
society with less crime, a clean environment and healthy natural
resources, greater economic security and less poverty, better
physical health, more free time, and stronger communities.
We want to become wiser, freer, and more caring. We are completely
capable of measuring our progress in this way, and of re-ordering
our policy priorities accordingly, to create the kind of society
we genuinely want to inhabit in the new millennium.
No political party officially favours greater insecurity,
a degraded environment, or more stress, poverty and inequality.
Why then do we see policies that promote those very outcomes?
It is nobody's fault. We have all been receiving the wrong
messages from the misuse of the GDP as a measure of progress,
and we have all been hooked on the economic growth illusion.
But we will never leave our children a better legacy until
we cut through the myth that "more" means "better",
and until we stop gauging our economic "improvement"
by how fast the economy is growing.
One of the fastest growing sectors of the American economy
is imprisonment, at an annual growth rate of 6.2% per year
throughout the 1990s. One in every 150 Americans is now behind
bars, the highest rate in the world along with Russia, compared
to one in 900 Canadians and one in 1,600 Nova Scotians. But
having a more peaceful society and spending less on prisons,
burglar alarms and security systems actually shows up as disadvantage
in our GDP and growth statistics. The booming U.S. security
industry adds $40 billion a year to the economy, with most
sales now going to schools. Is this our model of a "robust"
and "healthy" economy?
Gambling is another rapid growth industry - a $50 billion
a year business in the U.S. Divorce adds $20 billion a year
to the U.S. economy. Car crashes add another $57 billion.
Prozac sales have quadrupled since 1990 to more than $3 billion
- a sign of progress?
Overeating contributes to economic growth many times over,
beginning with the value of the excess food consumed and the
advertising needed to sell it. Then the diet and weight-loss
industries add $32 billion a year to the U.S. economy, and
obesity-related health problems another $50 billion, at the
same time that 20 million people, mostly children, die every
year from hunger in the world
Toxic pollution, sickness, stress, and war all make the economy
grow. The Exxon Valdez contributed far more to the U.S. economy
by spilling its oil than if it had delivered the oil safely
to port, because all the cleanup costs, lawsuits and media
coverage added to the growth statistics. The Yugoslav war
is costing the NATO countries $60 million a day, and our economies
will benefit even more by rebuilding what we destroy.
Growth and Inequality
Even in material terms, measuring well being by growth rates
does not tell us how many people have been left behind by
the growth spurt of the 1990s. Indeed, the economy can mushroom
even while inequality and poverty grow. The U.S. Census Bureau
reports that income inequality has risen dramatically since
1968, by 18% for all U.S. households and by over 23% for families.
The richest 1% of American households now owns 40% of the
national wealth, while the net worth of middle class families
has fallen steadily through the 1990s due to rising indebtedness.
Bill Gates alone owns more wealth than the bottom 45% of U.S.
households combined. Is this the example we want to emulate?
In Canada neither GDP nor inequality have grown as rapidly
as in the U.S. But despite the economic recovery of the 1990s,
child poverty has increased by 47% since the House of Commons
unanimously vowed to eliminate it in 1989. Here in Nova Scotia,
real income after taxes and transfers has fallen by 24% for
the poorest 40% of Nova Scotian families since 1990. In other
words, there is no guarantee that the tide of economic growth
lifts all boats, and the evidence indicates that the opposite
is frequently the case.
Measuring progress by the sum total of economic activity
is like a policeman who counts his contribution by adding
up all the street activity he observes. The lady walking her
dog, the thief stealing the car, the children playing on the
corner, the thug hitting someone with a lead pipe - all are
recorded equally. Like the policeman's log, our growth statistics
make no distinction between economic activity that contributes
to well being and that which causes harm. We expect more of
our policeman, and we should expect no less of our leadership.
But surely, it is argued, growth is necessary to create jobs.
Next, we'll look at the evidence and at better ways to measure
our well being and progress.
To Part Two
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When
the Exxon Valdez went aground in Alaska, the GDP grew
far faster than it would have than if the cargo had
been delivered, because of the cleanup costs.
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