Why did Labour choose to focus on GDP?

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As the Office for National Statistics have noted this morning in this chart, growth in the UK is fading away:

The obvious conclusion to draw is that by focusing on growth, Labour has either chosen the wrong metric on which to claim success, or they are miserably failing.

Since I cannot be bothered to discuss yet another miserable failure by Labour, let me instead muse on the question of whether they have chosen the wrong metric for success.

As I have noted here many times, gross domestic product, or GDP, is notoriously difficult to estimate. It also provides almost no indication whatsoever of growth in well-being. What is more, it is entirely indifferent to distribution, meaning that just because GDP has grown there is no necessary suggestion that any particular person might have benefited. In addition, this data is not adjusted for population, and so an increase in growth might actually imply an overall decrease in GDP had a population. The ONS has not commented on this particular issue in their press releases this morning.

The overall point is, if you were to choose a metric to indicate success, GDP is, in an era when the reliability of statistical data is becoming increasingly hard to gauge, a particularly poor one to choose.

That is, perhaps, most especially because it creates the risk of alienation. Claiming success at a time when many people will be feeling that the economy is working against them, rather than for them, is only going to ostracise many voters, as is very obviously happening.

So, what should we be doing instead? The following might be more useful:

  • A focus on income per head.
  • Measures of changes in median income.
  • Fluctuations in inequality.
  • Changes in real rates of investment.
  • Success in tackling climate change.
  • Measures of achievement in the delivery of public services, such as health outcomes, education outcomes, and so on.
  • Changes in the sense of well-being.
  • The reduction in the share of GDP attributable to rent, interest, and other forms of rent extraction from the after-tax income of those in the UK.
  • Recognition of the value of unpaid work within and beyond the home, and placing a value upon it, and changes in it.
  • Measures of social cohesion.

I could, of course, go on. This is a topic that is always worthy of deeper consideration, but at this moment, these provide a clear indication that there are, very obviously, better indicators of success that could be used within our economy, and yet Labour is choosing to promote one of the most divisive forms of indicators that Labour could have opted for.

Why did they do that?

Was it just because they really do think that every form of state spending is dependent upon private sector growth for its funding? Are they really that stupid?

Or, did they select GDP as their criterion because they aren't interested in things like distribution, well-being, and even the risk of alienation, so long as they keep the wealthy happy?

We don't know, because they do not explain their choice, relying instead upon neoliberal thinking that is spoonfed to them, day in day out, by a far-right neoliberal media and think tanks, whose ideologies they appear to embrace.

That, though, is precisely why I do ask the question. After all, someone's got to.


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