(no title)
CapitalTntcls | 2 years ago
> Depending on the lifestyle (or parts thereof) in question, this may not be a bad thing. Certain lifestyle (aspects) may be imprudent,
I guess he was talking about people that cant afford a 70000 truck at first place. Some people on rich countries like Brasil, 11th GDP in 2022, were just not able to afford food.
throw0101d|2 years ago
But building a new school, or bridge, or factory, or repaving a road to fix potholes, does add to GDP.
GDP is a measure of economic activity, and having positive activity is generally a good thing. (Though some is not: if there's an oil spill, that will increase economic activity due to having to spend money on the clean-up measures.)
> Positive GDP is an important measure on Capitalist system but it does not reflect fully in the life of most poor people.
If you think poor people have a hard time with positive GDP, do you think they'll have a better time when it's negative?
leereeves|2 years ago
And reducing economic inequality might reduce GDP even as it improves the lives of poor people. Forcing people to work harder is good for GDP even if it isn't the best thing for the workers.
dragontamer|2 years ago
Is America gaming and overemphasizing GDP? I don't think so. We have all kinds of economic measurements, and the one most people seem to be discussing today is inflation.
As long as we don't go stupid and braindead, and consider the overall economic picture, we'll do fine. We also can't ignore the best data that's collected or consider it conspiracy-laden fakes. But we also need to have enough skepticism to make sure our numbers are legitimate.
There's certainly people who fail on both sides. Overly trusting one number (ignoring all others) for the sake of their arguments. Or alternatively, ignoring inconvenient numbers (well, inconvenient for their side of the argument).
eru|2 years ago
You can also measure GDP in less-than-capitalist systems.
You are right that GDP is a proxy for stuff we actually care about. But it tends to correlate really well with all the things we do care about.