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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 Big Mac 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? Longevity and GDP per capita • Increases rapidly up to ca 4000$ per capita • Small returns after that Infant Mortality and GDP per capita • 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 highincome 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 Results – Turning points Implications of EKC • If exists do we not need to worry about the environment? • Tunneling through • Possible increase later on – statistical evidence? Per Capita GDP 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? 1. Ignores income distribution • Can be fixed using Gini coefficient 2. Rough measure of employment 3. Must use real or constant values • Always use deflators 4. Does not capture well quality of products What is (not) included in GNP? 5. Excludes some non-market and nonproductive 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 nonproductive 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 10. Includes various expenditures such as: 1. 2. 3. 4. Commuting National defense Police Sanitation etc. What does GNP measure? • • • • • • • Wealth? Sustainable income? Hicksian income? Economic development? Sustainable development? Economic welfare? Human welfare?