Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Rick Teller's avatar

Why should anyone care about the level of economic activity as such? What everyone wants is an improvement in, or if wealthy the maintenance of, their living standard, which I define as their ability to get what they want, whatever that may be. That is a function of a person’s financial resources (income plus savings) and the cost of whatever is in their market basket. A dollar decline in their cost of living is actually better than a dollar increase in their income because the latter gets taxed, the former doesn’t.

When GDP's predecessor GNP was first being developed in the 1930s, the government was very small relative to the private sector. If it were still that way, economic activity, which is what GDP measures as you say, would be closely correlated with living standards. As governments have become much larger relative to the private sector in recent decades, GDP increasingly measures activity producing what politicians and government administrators want, which mostly is not what people want for themselves. The government buys stuff from the private sector, so an increasing amount of private sector activity serves government demand, not private demand.

Keep in mind that when people work or earn the profits from their business, whatever their jobs or businesses, they use that money to buy consumer-oriented output such as food, clothing, shelter, energy, travel, healthcare, etc. Before the government got so big nearly everyone was producing exactly that output. Now, tens of millions of people working in the government and private sector are getting paid but not producing what they and others want for themselves.

IOW, more government spending increases the demand for consumer-oriented output, but not the supply. That pressures their prices up and reduces living standards because people, especially those already on tight budgets, are forced to buy less.

This is why there is such a disparity between economists, who look at GDP and think the economy is doing fine, and big chunks of the public who are unhappy because they are very aware of all the things they used to buy regularly but can no longer afford to do so, despite working as hard as ever.

For more, please check out my recently published book and substack.

Expand full comment
Taimyoboi's avatar

“The more we outsource, the better off we are.”

So, we should pay others to have kids and enjoy years of leisure provided by the services of those paid for children?

Expand full comment
36 more comments...

No posts