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IDEAS
ON LIBERTY
Economics on Trial
APRIL 2001
Beyond
GDP: A Breakthrough in National Income Accounting
by Mark Skousen
"It
is apparent that a large part of a country's total production
serves for the production of capital goods and not for the
production of consumer goods, and that the production of capital
goods must itself become a specialized branch of manufacturing."
—Wilhelm Ropke 1
Good
news! The U.S. Department of Commerce, which compiles Gross
Domestic Product (GDP), has just added a new national income
statistic, Gross Output (GO), as a measure of total spending
in the economy. I have been making the case for this new statistic
for over ten years. Now it is a reality. In The Structure
of Production (1990) and Economics on Trial (1993),
I was critical of GDP for two reasons:
First,
GDP is a Keynesian concept that measures only the output of
final goods and services and excludes intermediate production.
Second, government spending is included in GDP data, an autonomous
addition to national output.2
Both
peculiarities of GDP have led to much mischief. In the first
case, by focusing solely on final output, many economists
and commentators in the media have concluded that consumer
spending is more important than capital investment in an economy,
based on the fact that consumption expenditures usually represent
about two-thirds of GDP. In the second case, including government
spending in GDP has led many pundits to believe that an increase
in that spending—even if accomplished through deficit spending—will
automatically increase economic growth (or conversely, a cut
in government spending will inevitably lead to a recession).
Both conclusions are false.
Most
students of economics are unaware of the fact that GDP was
created by Simon Kuznets during World War II to quantify final
aggregate demand according to the new economics of Keynes.
As such, GDP ignores all intermediate spending in the economy,
based on the tenuous argument that earlier stages of production
constitute double counting.
However,
the goods-in-process sector of the economy—the natural resource,
manufacturing, and wholesale stages—are important for several
reasons. Austrian economist Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk and German
economist Wilhelm Ropke, among others, demonstrated that interest
rates and technology greatly influence the structure of production
and that changes in the early stages are especially important
in the business cycle.
In
an effort to measure intermediate production, The Structure
of Production introduced a new national income statistic,
Gross Domestic Output (GDO)—a more complete measure of spending
at all stages of production—as an "Austrian" alternative to
the Keynesian GDP. It counts spending (sales or revenues)
of firms at all stages of production, not just at the retail
level.
GO:
A New National Statistic
For
a decade I thought my criticisms of GDP had fallen on deaf
ears and no one was interested in using a new national income
statistic like GDO that accurately included total spending
in the economy, not just final output. However, I am happy
to report that the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic
Analysis has just begun to publish a new series called "Gross
Output," an annual measure of total spending at all stages.
GO is defined as Intermediate Input (II) plus GDP (final output).3
Intermediate
Input (II) represents the sale of all products in the natural
resource, manufacturing, and wholesale markets. GDP represents
the final retail market.
I
am currently working on a professional paper analyzing GO
and II statistics and how they increase our understanding
of the economy. Since this paper will not be published for
some time, let me give you a few of my preliminary conclusions.
Overall, much of the data appears to confirm several Austrian
themes.
First,
the data support the Austrian theory that the structure of
production lengthens as an economy grows. Indeed, from 1987
until 1998 real GDP rose from $6.1 trillion to $8.8 trillion,
or 39 percent (using 1996 as a base year). But real Intermediate
Input (II) increased from $4.3 trillion to $6.5 trillion,
or 53 percent, much faster than GDP. In other words, the producer/capital
goods market grew more rapidly than the consumer/retail good
market. This suggests that the number of stages of production
increased.
Second,
the data seem to confirm the Austrian view that production
in the intermediate processes tends to be more volatile than
final output and thus more sensitive to the business cycle.
For example, during the 1990-91 recession, real GDP fell $31.5
billion, while real II fell $74.6 billion—more than twice
retail sales. Since then, intermediate production has grown
substantially faster (41 percent) than consumer spending (27
percent) from 1991 to 1998. I would like to test these statistics
during previous boom-bust cycles (such as 1973-75 and 1980-82),
but unfortunately, the data for II and GO are incomplete prior
to 1987.
Third,
GO data support the Austrian argument that business investment—not
consumer spending—is the driving force behind economic growth.
The Keynesian argument that consumer spending is the largest
sector of the economy is specious and is based on a misunderstanding
of GDP statistics. It is true that personal consumption expenditures
typically represent 67 percent of GDP, but GDP is not total
spending in the economy. On measuring total spending (GO),
one sees that the capital/producer goods industry is substantially
larger than the final consumer/retail goods industry. Using
1998 data, we find that personal consumption expenditures
amount to $5.8 trillion, only 38 percent of GO, and gross
business investment (which includes all intermediate production,
plus gross fixed investment) amounts to $7.9 trillion, 52
percent of total spending.
In
sum, intermediate production does matter, and GO is a better
indicator of what is happening in the entire economy, not
just the retail sector. Hopefully, the next step will be for
the Commerce Department to release up-to-date quarterly data
for GO and II as they currently do for GDP. We could learn
a lot more about the direction of the economy with these new
Austrian national income statistics
1.
Wilhelm Ropke, Economics of a Free Society (Chicago:
Henry Regnery & Co., 1963), p. 43.
2. See The Structure of Production (New York: New York
University Press, 1990), chapter 6, and Economics on Trial
(Homewood, Ill.: Irwin, 1993), chapter 4.
3. See "Improved Estimates of Gross Product by Industry for
1947-98," Survey of Current Business 80:6 (June 2000),
pp. 24-63. Table 8 measures Gross Output 1987-98, and table
9 measures Intermediate Input 1987-98.
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