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Misconceived measurement of Progress

 
 
Reply Mon 31 Dec, 2007 01:32 pm
National income figures give us only the bare bones of a society's progress. They neither reveal the real beneficiaries nor the composition of that income. Neither do they value the things that human beings consider important for themselves but have little or no market value for other people or for those beholden to statistical aggregates- better nutrition and health services, greater access to knowledge, more secure livelihoods, better working conditions, security against crime and physical violence, satisfying leisure hours and a sense of participating in the economic, cultural, religious and political activities of their communities. Of course, people also want higher incomes. But income is never the sum total of human life.

For most people, health, security and love are the three important things in life, and how many people can put their hand on their heart and say they are sure that in their own lives these three things are eternally spoken for?

This debate reaches back in European thought at least to the time of Aristotle. "Wealth is evidently not the good we are seeking, for it is merely useful for the sake of something else," he wrote. Even the 19th century philosophers never were gross national product absolutists after the fashion of today. Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill, from very different perspectives, all saw the creation of wealth as only one part of a complicated whole.

How marvellous it is then at the gloomy end of a gloomy year to be presented with a report by the United Nations Development Programme that actually makes the reader feel good about human progress. In its just released Human Development report there are long, sophisticated tables encompassing all the world's countries in which countries are not ranked by income per head but by yardsticks which are considered more telling- longevity, knowledge and a decent standard of living. Cold and wintry though it is, Iceland comes out top, followed closely by Norway, Australia, Canada, Ireland, Sweden, Switzerland and Japan in that order. (The weather obviously is not a factor.) Hong Kong is higher up the table than Germany or Israel and Barbados is the top of the Third World countries with, surprise, surprise, Argentina, yesterday's basket case, not far behind, which goes to show how with dynamic leadership, sound economic policies and a social will, how quickly a country can be turned around.

The report also presents another way of looking at progress- the countries with a relatively crime-free environment. If you want to live in a country with a high standard of living, low violence and a miniscule murder rate one would choose Japan first and foremost, with Hong Kong as a close second, or perhaps Jordan (although poorer) where I am now. Indeed all the Muslim countries, in particular the Arab ones, have extremely low murder rates. Then come Norway, Austria, and Greece. The countries best to avoid are Colombia, South Africa, Venezuela, Jamaica, El Salvador and Russia. Surprisingly, the U.S. although much worse than the European average, compared with these six countries is only moderately violent. But then, as is true with all these statistics, if you exclude the urban slum parts of America, its status improves remarkably: it is not only fairly low in crime but also very high on the human development index.
Would you be reading this now

Today many governments are finding, after many decades of stressing the pursuit of high growth rates, that they have failed to reduce the social and economic deprivation of a substantial number of their people.

At the same time we have become aware that a number of low-income countries have achieved high rates of human development by a judicious use of their scarce resources to ensure a basic level of well being throughout their societies- Costa Rica, Uruguay, Cuba, and the ex-British Caribbean islands are good examples. Few outsiders looked at China, Taiwan and South Korea thirty years go and anticipated their present fast growth rate. The present income of a country may offer little guidance to its future growth prospect if is nurturing its resources by investing in its people, as these countries did in the early years of their decision to modernise and develop economically.

Not least we should be aware of how misleading aggregate figures can be. Income is a means not an end. It may be used for essential medicines or narcotics, for sitting in a luxury car in a traffic jam or for a high-speed train link. For green spaces or multi-storey car parks. Everyone in any country that has experienced rapid economic growth, whether it be a mature economy like the U.S. and Denmark or an up and coming one like Malaysia and Brazil, knows from their own firsthand experience that it doesn't tell you that much about a society. It gives a kind of useful benchmark of aggregate economic momentum. But, beyond that, the more one looks at it the more misleading it can become.
http://www.transnational.org/Columns_Power/2007/47_MeasureProgress.html
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Ramafuchs
 
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Reply Mon 31 Dec, 2007 02:05 pm
"Today of the approximately 6 billion people in the world, it is estimated that at least a billion live in abject poverty, lives cruel, empty, and mercifully short. Another 2 billion eke out life on a bare subsistence level, usually sustained only by one or another starch, the majority without potable drinking water or sanitary toilets. More than 2 million more live at the bottom edges of the money economy but with incomes less than $5,000 a year and no property or savings, no net worth to pass on to their children. That leaves less than a billion people who even come close to struggling for lives of comfort, with jobs and salaries of some regularity, and a quite small minority at the top of that scale who could really be said to have achieved comfortable lives; in the world, some 350 people can be considered (U.S. dollar) billionaires (with slightly more than 3 million millionaires), and their total net worth is estimated to exceed that of 45 per cent of the world's population.

This is progress? A disease such a small number can catch? And with such inequity, such imbalance?

In the U.S., the most materially advanced nation in the world and long the most ardent champion of the notion of progress, some 40 million people live below the official poverty line and another 20 million or so below the line adjusted for real costs; 6 million or so are unemployed, more than 30 million said to be too discouraged to look for work, and 45 million are in "disposable" jobs, temporary and part-time, without benefits or security. the top 5 percent of the population owns about two-thirds of the total wealth; 60 percent own no tangible assets or are in debt; in terms of income, the top 20 percent earn half the total income, the bottom 20 percent less than 4 percent of it.

All this hardly suggests the sort of material comfort progress is assumed to have provided. Certainly many in the U.S. and throughout the industrial world live at levels of wealth undreamed of in ages past, able to call forth hundreds of servant-equivalents at the flip of a switch or turn of a key, and probably a third of this "first world" population could be said to have lives of a certain amount of ease and convenience. Yet it is a statistical fact that it is just this segment that most acutely suffers from the true "comfortable disease," what I would call affluenza: heart disease, stress, overwork, family dysfunction, alcoholism, insecurity, anomie, psychosis, loneliness, impotence, alienation, consumerism, and coldness of heart."
http://www.primitivism.com/facets-myth.htm
Is it the real progress that we need?
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Ramafuchs
 
  1  
Reply Mon 31 Dec, 2007 04:59 pm
It is 2008 here in Köln.
Let us find a progress to all the community around the globe.
Nice new year to all.
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Ramafuchs
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Jan, 2008 04:01 pm
"Americans might object: there is no way we would sacrifice our living standards for the benefit of people in the rest of the world. Nevertheless, whether we get there willingly or not, we shall soon have lower consumption rates, because our present rates are unsustainable.

Real sacrifice wouldn't be required, however, because living standards are not tightly coupled to consumption rates. Much American consumption is wasteful and contributes little or nothing to quality of life. For example, per capita oil consumption in Western Europe is about half of ours, yet Western Europe's standard of living is higher by any reasonable criterion, including life expectancy, health, infant mortality, access to medical care, financial security after retirement, vacation time, quality of public schools and support for the arts. Ask yourself whether Americans' wasteful use of gasoline contributes positively to any of those measures. "
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/02/opinion/02diamond.html?pagewanted=2

The above quote is from NYT
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