Saturday, August 15, 2020

False Bizarre Economy Renders GDP Useless (Part 1)


GDP Growth Is Akin To "Magic Illusion 101"
We may be getting to the place where more people are beginning to realize the illusion created from printing and pouring trillions of dollar haphazardly into the economy can't last. Today, consumer confidence hinges on what Washington decides to do with the next stimulus package. At this point it is likely they will pour enough money into the economy to keep things artificially inflated. Still, anyone looking at the coming gross domestic product (GDP) figures as an indication of how the economy is faring is barking up the wrong tree.

The usefulness and validity of the GDP numbers in determining how rapidly the economy is growing has been disputed over the years. Let us face the fact the illusion the economy continues to work its way forward is completely based on "government deficit spending" coupled with the Fed's very easy monetary policy.  At the same time, we should concede much of the perceived growth is because all the money being printed has to go somewhere. Sadly, economic growth does not guarantee a healthy economy. At a time when the government in its wisdom has just completed a program to pay over 30 million workers to not work the "false economy" tag sticks like glue.

The original formula for measuring economic growth was full of flaws but over the years we have allowed numbers that mean "nothing" to seep into how the GDP is calculated all in an effort to create the illusion of growth. In years past America far outproduced the rest of the world and manufactured goods that it exported across the seas. Today much of our economy is dominated by the service sector, this means if you wash my windows, then I will mow your yard. Another huge problem is that the GDP counts government spending, and politicians spend (other people's) money on stuff simply to get reelected. If this isn't the clearest cut case that the calculation of GDP is meant to obscure, rather than to inform, I can't imagine what would be.

Years ago, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has made a significant change in the way they calculate the GDP.  It slid by unnoticed by many people but they changed how they classified and recorded expenditures for R&D and entertainment, literary, and artistic originals. An announcement of this change was made by the BEA during February of 2013, this resulted in an increase in the GDP. This kind of "bump" means that a gain of 2% today is, in reality, less than a gain of 2% years ago. This means we are comparing apples to oranges when comparing today's growth to that of prior years.

Gross Domestic Product is defined as the total market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a given year, equal to total consumer, investment, and government spending, plus the value of exports, minus the value of imports. Within that definition, it appears those in power have discovered some wiggle room, and even before that, a debate existed as to what it really tells us. When we delve into all of this it is easy to see this is not simple at all and that the GDP can be a master illusion when we look at how it filters down to both society and the Main Street economy. The first comprehensive set of measures of national income was developed by economist Simon Kuznets who in 1934 told the US Congress the formula was problematic.

In 1962 Kuznets again emphasized that we must keep in mind the difference between quantity and the quality of growth. He made clear a distinction exist between cost and returns, and between the long and the short run. Kuznets went further to specify we needed goals concerning both growth "of what, and for what." Other economists have agreed that GDP is an empty abstraction with a very weak link to the real economy. The framework fails to reflect the difference between real wealth expansion or capital consumption. Kuznets used the example of the government building a pyramid that added nothing to the well-being of individuals, it would be viewed as economic growth, but in reality, divert funding away from real wealth-generating activities harms the generation of real wealth.

What is not stated can often be far more important than what is. The number we are spoon-fed and await with such glee has little to do with real growth but most likely mirrors or is merely a reflection of monetary pumping. The GDP number fails to highlight a slew of important factors that feed directly into our standard of living and the health of our economy, such as;

    * How wealth is distributed and inequality
    * Taxation and how it affects both the economy and society
    * Non-market transactions like volunteer and work conducted "off the books"
    *  Underground economy, illegal trade, and many cash transactions.
    * Asset value, meaning GDP ignores changes in what things are worth
    * The non-monetary part of the economy, bartering of goods and services
    * Distinguishing between production that is subsidized and that which is not
    * Quality improvements and new products
    * What is being produced, bombs or butter and a better-educated populace
    * The sustainability of growth or misallocation of either capital or resources
    * Cross-border parity and changes in currency value
    * External factors such as negative environmental effects or the health of the people

Some countries have even gone as far as to include things like prostitution and other illegal activities in a way to boost GDP and in effect lower their ratio of GDP to government debt. In 2013 in advice to their government the UK's Natural Capital Committee highlighted some of the failures of GDP when they pointed out its focus on flows can allow an economy to run down its assets while recording high levels of GDP growth until a point is reached where this begins to impact future growth. They went on to make it clear the recorded GDP growth rate is prone to overstate the sustainable growth rate. This number as with most numbers once put out there is subject to full-blown manipulation and spin. Bottom-line in the words of the man creating this indicator of economic growth, "The GDP framework is more or less an empty abstraction devoid of any link to the real world."

2 comments:

  1. "more people are beginning to realize the illusion created from printing and pouring trillions of dollar haphazardly into the economy can't last"


    You couldn't be more fucking wrong......I've been reading this doom porn for almost 20 fucking years and it's cost me a fortune......I have no clue where to go from here BUT I think everyone is starting to realize the OPPOSITE of the premise of that sentence........this can and WILL go on for the rest of out lives.

    As my sister just said during the "worst" economy in the history of the nation.......and I fucking quote....."houses are selling faster than we can look at them"

    I too have had this same view and I am the loser, the moron, the one missing out........I tired of all this.

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  2. I understand why you are angry and disillusioned, many people feel that way. What they are doing will work until it doesn't, then it won't. The path being taken by the Fed is not because everything is going great.
    It is important to remember that not everyone that has been bullish for the last twenty years has done all that well either. Inequality is on the rise and many small businesses are being forced to close.

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