Lessons from the history of gdp in the effort to create better indicators of prosperity, well-being, and happiness

Robert Costanza*, Maureen Hart, Ida Kubiszewski, Steve Posner, John Talberth

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

    6 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    GDP was never designed as a measure of national progress, prosperity, or well-being, and yet it has become the most widely accepted and influential goal for national economic policy. This paper explores how this has come to be, why it is well past time for a change, and what some of the alternatives to GDP might be. These alternative focus on measuring sustainable human well-being, rather than marketed economic activity � what GDP measures. Because GDP measures only monetary transactions related to the production of goods and services, it is based on an incomplete picture of the system within which the human economy operates. As a result, GDP not only fails to measure key aspects of quality of life; in many ways, it encourages activities that are counter to long-term community well-being. As ecological, economic, and social crises deepen, we desperately need new visions of a sustainable and desirable world and new ways to measure progress that have as broad a consensus and are therefore as influential as GDP has been in the past.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationRoutledge Handbook of Sustainability Indicators
    PublisherTaylor and Francis
    Pages117-123
    Number of pages7
    ISBN (Electronic)9781317200321
    ISBN (Print)9781138674769
    Publication statusPublished - 12 Jun 2018

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