GDP and Economic Well-Being
Review section 3 of the Macroeconomics chapter assigned in 2.1. Learn about the shortcomings of GDP as a measure of well-being. As we will see, GDP is an imperfect measure of happiness as it focuses exclusively on the material well-being of a country's citizens. Factors such as the quality of healthcare, education, and the environment, are not explicitly covered by GDP.
Conceptual Problems with Real GDP
The GDP Accounts Ignore "Bads"
Suppose a wave of burglaries were to break out across the United States. One would expect people to respond by buying more and louder burglar alarms, better locks, fiercer German shepherds, and more guard services than they had before. To the extent that they pay for these by dipping into savings rather than replacing other consumption, GDP increases. An epidemic might have much the same effect on GDP by driving up health-care spending. But that does not mean that crime and disease are good things; it means only that crime and disease may force an increase in the production of goods and services counted in the GDP.
Similarly, the GDP accounts ignore the impact of pollution on the environment. We might produce an additional $200 billion in goods and services but create pollution that makes us feel worse off by, say, $300 billion. The GDP accounts simply report the $200 billion in increased production. Indeed, some of the environmental degradation might itself boost GDP. Dirtier air may force us to wash clothes more often, to paint buildings more often, and to see the doctor more often, all of which will tend to increase GDP!