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Economic growth, economic development, well-being. Should we increase it at all cost? – a question of national planning Basic Concepts. What is Economic Growth?. An increase in Gross National Product (GNP) or GDP
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Economic growth, economic development, well-being Should we increase it at all cost? – a question of national planning Basic Concepts
What is Economic Growth? • An increase in Gross National Product (GNP) or GDP GNP: Measures the dollar value of all goods and services that an economy produces during a specified timeperiod - the throughput of stuff flowing through an economy
GNP in the big picture • Throughput – a flow based concept • Relies on input from natural capital
Economic Growth • Is a quantity based concept - not quality based • A direct measure of changes in the size of the economy • Is it a measure of welfare? • Development? • Sustainable development?
Importance of Economic Growth (via GNP) • Political Importance • Domestic (4 year planning) • International (Must be better to have higher GNP/Cap., than lower); IMF Policies • Humanitarian Importance • As an indicator of welfare? • As an indicator of development? • As an indicator of sustainable development? What can we really use it for?
Basic Concepts • GDP vs GNP • Nominal or current GNP • Not accounting for inflation • Constant or real GNP • Accounting for inflation
Basic Concepts • Constant GNP • Future values lower, past values higher • ((Current GNP)/GNP deflator)*100 Deflators based on: • Consumer prices (400 goods) • Producer prices (2800 items)
Basic Concepts • Deflators Example Consumer price index CPI = ∑((Pit/Pib)*(Pit/∑Pt))
Basic Concepts • PPP; Purchasing power parity • Law of one price: in an efficient market, identical goods must have only one price • A purchasing power parity exchange rate equalizes the purchasing power of different currencies in their home countries for a given basket of goods. • Often used to compare standard of living • Big Mac Index, Tall Latte index
Standard National Accounts • How to measure GNP? • 3 methods: • Expenditures • Value added of production • Income
Standard National Accounts Expenditures • GNP = C + I + G + (X - M) • Where: • C: Personal consumption expenditures • I: Gross private investment • G: Government expenditures • X: Exports • M: imports
Standard National Accounts • Production side • The sum of value added: the difference between revenue and cost. • Accounted for all sectors of the economy e.g. • Agriculture, construction, manufacturing, trade, finance, services, government
Standard National Accounts • Income side: • Income earned by all factors of production • Employee compensation • Rents (return to housing) • Interest payments (return to lenders of capital) • Payment to owners (return to capital) • Indirect business taxes (return to government)
Standard National Accounts Net National Product • NNP = GNP - Depreciation Depreciation: reduction in capital stock due to use causing wear and tear. National Income • NI = NNP - indirect taxes Available for spending
Standard National Accounts • Personal Income: PI = NI - Corporate profits - contribution to social insurance + transfer payments + interest income + dividend income • Disposable personal income: DPI = PI - personal tax payments
What does GNP measure? • Total value of goods and services produced within an economy in a given year • Measure of welfare, development, sustainable anything?
Definitions • Welfare: measures quality of life • Development: Quality based concept • Economic income:Value of goods and services • Sustainable income:How much we can spend without running down capital stocks - can maintain same level of spending in perpetuity
Definitions • Hicksian income: Income a man can consume during a week and be as well off at the end of the week as he was in the beginning - living of the interests of both man made and natural capital • Economic Welfare: GNP corrected for expenditures on various regrettable necessities • Human Welfare: Separation of means from ends - a direct measure of well-being
But can GDP be an indicator of human development or human welfare?
Longevityand GDPpercapita • Increases rapidly up to ca 4000$ per capita • Small returns after that
Infant Mortalityand GDPpercapita • Declines rapidly up to ca 4000$ per capita • Small returns after that
Literacy and GDP per Capita • Increases rapidly up to ca 4000$ per capita • Small returns after that
Happiness and GDP per Capita • Increases rapidly up to ca 4000$ per capita • Small returns after that • What does this mean? • What influences happiness?
Do changes in GDP correlate to changes in environmental quality?
The Environmetnal Kuznets Curve • Kuznets curve (KC) is the graphical representation of Kuznet’s theory from the 1940’s that economic inequality increases over time, then at a critical point begins to decrease. • Environmental KC (EKC) shows a hypothesized relationship between various indicators of environmental degradation and income per capita.
ECK • In the early stages of economic growth degradation and pollution increase, • Beyond some level of income per capita (which varies for different indicators) the trend reverses, so that at high-income levels economic growth leads to environmental improvement. • This implies that the environmental impact indicator is an inverted U-shaped function of income per capita.
ECK • Various functional form found: EKC does not always apply • Logistic Increase – e.g. carbon dioxide emissions • Constant Decrease – e.g. bacteria in drinking water • Inverted U – sulfur dioxide concentration
ECK • Scale effect: Economic growth increases environmental pollution if there is no change in other factors • Other factors explain the shape e.g.: • Change in output mix • Change in input mix • State of technology • Production efficiency • Demand for “improved environment”
The Model ln(ED) = a + b1*ln(GDP/P) - b2 *(ln(GDP/P))**2 + error term What to look for? • Coefficents • T-stats • R - squared
Evidence for the EKC • Jury still out • Lots of bad stats, theory statistically weak • What about trade effects? • Turning points vary • Low for local pollutants (3000-4000 USD per cap) • Others no relationship (deforestation, biodiversity • River quality, carbon, waste increases with increasing income
Implications of EKC • If exists do we not need to worry about the environment? • Tunneling through • Possible increase later on – statistical evidence?
Increase GDP at all cost? Should we always aim to increase GDP? What is the ultimate gain? Happiness? What is the cost? Environmental degradation? • Remember Kuznets curve and IPAT Stress? Depends on what GDP really measures – is it an indicator of wealth?
What is (not) included in GNP? • Ignores income distribution • Can be fixed using Gini coefficient • Rough measure of employment • Must use real or constant values • Always use deflators • Does not capture well quality of products
What is (not) included in GNP? 5. Excludes some non-market and non-productive transactions - but not all • Excluded • Things produced at home • If women only counted • Childcare • Subsistence production • Things that are resold or reused • Increased durability reduces growth
What is (not) included in GNP? 5. Excludes some non-market and non-productive transactions - but not all • Included • Consumption/production at farms of food and fuel • Rental income of all houses
What is (not) included in GNP? 6. Depreciation of the capital stock • Neither man-made (Included in NNP) - increased depreciation increases growth • Nor natural capital
What is (not) included in GNP? 7. Treats some expenditures as final use - even if some are intermediate factors of production: a) defensive expenditures • Households (included) • Firms (excluded) • Government (included) b) Army expenditures (included)
What is (not) included in GNP? 8. No measure for leasure; • Increased work increases GNP 9. Urbanization increases GNP • Includes various expenditures such as: • Commuting • National defense • Police • Sanitation etc.
What does GNP measure? • Wealth? • Sustainable income? • Hicksian income? • Economic development? • Sustainable development? • Economic welfare? • Human welfare?