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The assessment of economic
growth based on Gross Domestic Product is a fallacy, because GDP is merely a
measure of the amount of money in an economy. The one thing it does not measure,
which is central to economic progress (note progress, not growth), is the
level of entrepreneurial activity. This has important implications for the
efficacy of government interventions and solutions to the current economic
crisis.
I have written about GDP before, but to refresh the reader’s
memory, GDP is basically the sum total of recorded business activity at the
consumption level plus government spending expressed in money terms. If the
government spends more, GDP rises; give more money to consumers, GDP rises;
give more bank credit to consumers or business, GDP rises. Cut government
spending, GDP falls. This is not contentious and has nothing to do with
economic progress. Importantly, it excludes future entrepreneurial activity,
except to the extent that an entrepreneur has actually spent some money
putting his future plans into action. The obsession with GDP means that
entrepreneurial activity, which is Adam Smith’s unseen hand that guides
our future, is invisible to economic planners.
If that was the only consequence
of confusing a money quantity with economic progress the results would not be
so serious. Instead, misleading statistics such as GDP are leading all
governments into bad policy decisions, and their choice has narrowed down to
either ever-greater reflationary attempts to pump up GDP, or alternatively
facing a collapse in the GDP number as bank credit contracts. The situation
facing the eurozone already precludes any
compromise between these extremes, while other nations believe they can print
their way out of this difficulty.
The twin errors of
misunderstanding GDP are the failure to see that monetary inflation is
concealing a deepening economic depression, and it encourages policies that
destroy entrepreneurial activity, or economic progress itself. This is a
deadly combination, the equivalent of being in a hole and continuing to dig.
We cannot expect politicians to
stop digging deeper and faster when their economic advisors are calling for
more shovels. All politicians are fully committed to the fallacies that
result from confusing GDP with economic progress. They pursue economic
policies that are the equivalent of eating their own children. The children
being eaten are savers, increasingly raided to sustain the status quo: savers
whose savings are a precondition for entrepreneurial
activity, and without which increasing numbers of us become reliant on the
state.
There can be little hope that
this lunacy will be abandoned while statistical nonsense such as GDP growth
persists. The underlying economic depression, evidenced by high levels of
unemployment, is symptomatic of economies burdened by misallocated resources.
The solution is to do exactly the opposite of actions currently being
pursued. To quote Calvin Coolidge: “Perhaps one of the most important
accomplishments of my administration has been minding my own business. Government shouldn't
play a part in everyday
life."
It is still possible to do this.
What is required in our leaders is a sound understanding of economics instead
of belief-based neoclassicism. Thus armed, a politician should be able to
explain the proper course of action to the reasonable majority, and implement
it with their support.
Originally published at Goldmoney here
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