Is growth all its cracked up to be?

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It is monthly GDP data day from the Office for National Statistics. The percentage figures for the month (this data is always reported as percentage changes: it's as if the economy only trades in statistics and not in pounds) is as follows:

0.2 per cent growth in a month is neither here nor there, to be honest, and over three months, it is close to flatlining. If Rachel Reeves is relying on growth, she needs nothing short of a miracle right now.

But she should not rely on growth, anyway, because growth by itself tells us nothing about the quality of the economy. These charts tell us a little more:

Look at health and social care on that chart: output fell. That does matter.

Then look at this one:

We're buying more 'stuff' to destroy the planet.

I'm not drawing major conclusions from data for a month, but looked at as a whole, this 'growth' says we're doing exactly the wrong things to meet real needs in our economy.

 

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