GDP and beyond: measuring economic progress and sustainability.
Landefeld, J. Steven ; Moulton, Brent R. ; Platt, Joel D. 等
THE United States provides some of the most highly developed sets
of gross domestic product (GDP) accounts in the world. These
accounts--which are collectively known as the national income and
product accounts (NIPAs) or national accounts--have been regularly
updated over the years and have well served researchers, the business
community, and policymakers alike. However, since their inception in the
1930s, the economy has continuously evolved, and issues have been raised
about the scope and structure of the national accounts (Bureau of
Foreign and Domestic Commerce and National Bureau of Economic Research
1934). Simon Kuznets (1941), one of the early architects of the
accounts, recognized the limitations of focusing on market activities
and excluding household production and a broad range of other nonmarket
activities and assets that have productive value or yield satisfaction.
Further, the need to better understand the sources of economic growth in
the postwar era led to the development (much of it by academic
researchers) of various supplemental series, such as the contributions
of investments in human capital and natural resources to economic
growth.
More recently, concerns have been raised about the adequacy of the
national accounts in capturing the differential impact of the current
recession across households, industries, and regions of the country.
Concerns have also been raised about the failure of the national
accounts to highlight and provide adequate warning about the imbalances
that developed in housing and financial markets.
This article explores each of these issues and relates them to the
need for expanded or supplementary measures for the national accounts,
highlighting what such estimates might reveal relative to the
conventional statistics presented by GDP and other aggregate statistics
from the accounts. In particular, it explores how the accounts might be
extended to provide new measures of (1) the distribution of growth in
income across households, other sectors, and regions and (2) the
sustainability of trends in saving, investment, asset prices, and other
key variables important to understanding business cycles and the sources
of economic growth.
Broad Social Accounts
Kuznet's concerns about the exclusion of a broader set of
activities from the national accounts has been echoed over the ages,
notably by Robert E Kennedy in his eloquent critique of GDP as a measure
of society's progress.
Too much and too long, we seem to have surrendered community
excellence and community values in the mere accumulation of material
things. Our gross national product, (1) if we should judge America by
that, counts air pollution and cigarette advertising, and ambulances to
clear our highways of carnage. It counts special locks for our doors....
Yet the gross national product does not allow for the health of our
children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play... it
measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile.
And it tells us everything about America except why we are proud that we
are Americans.
Robert F. Kennedy Address, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas,
March 18, 1968
This concern has remained an issue, and at his inaugural address,
President Barack Obama said
The success of our economy has always depended not just on the size
of our gross domestic product, but on the reach of our prosperity; on
the ability to extend opportunity to every willing heart--not out of
charity, but because it is the surest route to our common good.
President Barack Obama, Inaugural Address, Washington, DC, January
20, 2009
The recent Report on the Measurement of Economic Performance and
Social Progress addressed these issues.
The big question concerns whether GDP provides a good measure of
living standards. In many cases, GDP statistics seem to suggest that the
economy is doing far better than most citizens' own perceptions.
Moreover, the focus on GDP creates conflicts: political leaders are told
to maximize it, but citizens also demand that attention be paid to
enhancing security, reducing pollution, and so forth--all of which might
lower GDP growth.
Stiglitz, Sen, Fitoussi (2009)
The Chair of the Commission that produced the report, Joseph
Stiglitz, summarized the conclusions as follows:
The fact that GDP may be a poor measure of well-being, or even of
market activity, has, of course, long been recognized. But changes in
society and the economy may have heightened the problems, at the same
time that advances in economics and statistical techniques may have
provided opportunities to improve our metrics.
Joseph Stiglitz (2009)
Work by Alan Krueger and others (2009) is the most recent
comprehensive attempt to develop a broader measure of social welfare.
(2) Their "time-use accounts" develop a measure of happiness
based on survey data on time use and happiness in different activities.
Their accounts represent a significant step forward in the long quest to
develop a broader measure of social welfare. They illustrate the
progress that can be made by having such research conducted by a
multidisciplinary team of independent researchers from academia. Their
work also is an example of how various problems can be avoided by
developing an entirely new measure with its own framework, concepts, and
methods rather than by trying to expand GDP.
Past efforts to expand conventional GDP have foundered on the
inevitable problems of subjectivity and uncertainty inherent in
measuring health, happiness, and the environment. (3) Critics feared
that the inclusion of such uncertain and subjective values in GDP would
seriously diminish the essential role of the national accounts to
financial markets, the Federal Reserve Board, the Treasury Department,
and Congress in measuring and managing the market economy.
In recognition of these difficulties, several National Academy of
Sciences studies on accounting for the environment (Nordhaus and
Kokkelenberg 1999) and nonmarket production (Abraham and Mackie 2005)
and the System of National Accounts (1993) guidelines for compiling GDP
have all concluded that an expansion of the GDP accounts should take
place in supplemental, or satellite, accounts that extend the scope of
the accounts without reducing the usefulness of the core GDP accounts.
They also conclude that such an expansion should focus on economic
aspects of non-market and near-market activities--such as energy and the
economy's use of natural resources, the impact of investments in
research and development (R&D), health care, or education--and not
attempt to measure the welfare effect of such interactions.
Finally, such an expansion of work would require interdisciplinary research between economists and such subject area experts as
epidemiologists, physicians, geologists, and engineers in other
government agencies to measure the relationship among air pollution and
human health and medical expenditures or among petroleum extraction and
changes in technology and reserves. It would also require the design,
development, and collection of data from new surveys. In an environment
of large competing demands on scarce resources, it is critical that such
an expansion of the scope of the accounts not occur at the expense of
funds needed to maintain, update, and improve the existing GDP accounts.
In recognition of the subjectivity, uncertainty, and resources
involved in producing expanded welfare and nonmarket accounts, there is
increasing interest in "new" estimates that could be produced
with information currently used to produce the existing accounts. For
example, the Stiglitz-Sen-Fitoussi commission (2009), which explored
expanded welfare measures, has suggested a number of ways that
"classical GDP issues" can be addressed within existing GDP
accounts or through an extension and improvement of measures included in
existing accounts.
What Can Be Done Within the Scope of the Existing Accounts?
Although the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) has conducted
research on a number of nonmarket satellite accounts and is currently at
work on several market-related satellite accounts (for health care and
R&D), relatively little attention has been paid to what can be done
within the scope of the existing accounts to produce more relevant
statistics. (4) For example, for many households, the performance of GDP
over the last economic expansion (2000-2007) does not seem to square
with their personal experience. The growth in their take-home pay and
bills seems to be very different from the growth of officially reported
"real" disposable income. Yet data are available from
BEA's national accounts and other data sources on the breakdown of
incomes, taxes, consumer outlays, and the prices households confront.
That data can be used to construct cash and other alternate estimates of
income that come closer to what most households are experiencing.
Further information from Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and other
existing data could provide further insights into the distribution of
household income.
Using statistics from BEA's accounts and other existing data,
it is possible to construct new measures--and to highlight existing
subcomponents of GDP--that would provide better indicators of, among
other things, the differential impact of GDP growth across states, the
sustainability of U.S. GDP growth, the adequacy of saving and
investment, and emerging risks to the economy.
The next section of this paper discusses potential new measures of
the distribution of growth across households, across regions of the
country, and across different types of businesses. The last section of
the paper discusses potential new measures of sustainability of trends
in investment, saving, asset values, and finance.
Income Growth Distribution Across Households, Regions, and
Businesses
Household income
The explanations for many of the differences between the individual
experiences of households and the picture of the economy captured in
GDP, personal income, and other aggregate statistics can be found by
drilling down below those aggregates in the national accounts and
looking at the components and supporting detail.
Compensation. Growth in real GDP, real income, and real
compensation must be first put on a per capita or per worker basis to
reflect something closer to the average worker's experience. Part
of the growth in production and income simply reflects the growth in the
labor force and the larger wage bill that must be distributed across a
larger labor force.
Workers and households also confront different prices than
producers, and at times, these prices change at quite different rates.
For example, between the first quarter of 2007 and the third quarter
2008, rapid increases in energy costs resulted in consumer inflation, as
measured by BEA's personal consumption expenditures price index,
which rose at an average annual rate of 3.8 percent. In contrast,
overall GDP inflation, which is a measure of domestic production and
excludes the prices of imported petroleum and other imported products,
rose at an average annual rate of 2.4 percent. Due in large part to
these different prices measures, growth in real GDP was 1.0 percentage
point higher than the growth rate in real disposable income.
Taxes and noncash benefits also drive a wedge between the
aggregates and the typical worker's experience. BEA's measure
of disposable income addresses the tax issue by deducting taxes paid by
households on their income. However, an alternate cash measure of
disposable income would also deduct employer contributions to pension
funds and contributions for health insurance and other benefits. (5)
These payments by employers are a real cost of production (which must be
recorded in the double-entry NIPAs as income) and a real value to the
employee. But when constructing a measure of cash income, noncash
payments by employers that are not available for current consumption
should probably be deducted along with taxes. Because of the strong
growth in employer "supplements," payments by employers for
pensions, health insurance plans, and government social insurance, the
difference between total compensation and take-home pay is often large.
Between 1967 and 2007, supplements, after adjustment for inflation, grew
at an average annual rate of 3 percent, while real wages and salaries
grew at an average annual rate of 1 percent.
Chart 1 illustrates the different perspectives on the economy that
emerge by looking "below" the headline numbers. Between 2000
and 2007, the headline number for real GDP grew at a 2.4 percent annual
rate, and real compensation grew at a 2.1 percent annual rate. (6)
In comparison, over the same period, the below-the-headline numbers
grew more slowly, with real
compensation per worker growing at an average annual rate of 1.5
percent, real wages per worker (compensation less supplements) growing
at an average annual rate of 1.2 percent, and real wages of production
workers and nonsupervisory workers growing at an average annual rate of
0.3 percent (chart 2).
Personal income. Personal income is a broader measure than
employment income and measures all income to households, including rent,
interest income, dividends, and transfer payments, mainly from the
government. Personal income also includes the income of nonprofit institutions. Transfer payments--such as social security, Medicare and
Medicaid, unemployment insurance, and other government programs--are
important additions to the picture of household income. Because these
payments tend to be countercyclical, they have a large effect on growth
in household income. As part of an effort to understand household
spending and saving behavior as well as household welfare, it may be
useful to decompose personal income in several different ways, including
such measures as cash income including transfers, market-based income
excluding transfers, and discretionary income.
[GRAPHIC 1 OMITTED]
[GRAPHIC 2 OMITTED]
Disposable income, transfers, and the business cycle. BEA's
existing accounts provide two adjustments to household income that are
useful in understanding household spending The first deducts taxes paid
by households and provides a measure of disposable personal income that
is the after-tax income available for consumption or saving. The second
deducts transfer payments in order to provide a better picture of the
state of the private economy over the course of the business cycle and
the incomes provided to households by the economy. The measure of
personal income less current transfer receipts is shown as an addenda
item in BEA personal income tables.
In 2008, transfer payments and lower taxes associated with the
economic stimulus acts helped boost real disposable personal income per
capita. In 2008, personal transfer payments increased $158 billion. Of
that amount, approximately $30 billion were for rebates to persons under
the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008. The same act reduced personal current
taxes $66 billion and more than accounted for the overall decrease in
personal taxes of $59 billion in 2008. Such countercyclical transfers
obscure changes in the components of income over the course of the
business cycle, and they along with other transfer payments can cause
differences across recipients of the transfers that are not reflected in
the existing NIPA income aggregates.
As can be seen in chart 3, real GDP grew at an average annual rate
of 2.4 percent over 2000-2007, and real disposable personal income grew
at a 2.7 percent rate. Over the same period, real personal income per
capita grew at a 1.5 percent rate, and real personal income less
transfers per capita grew at a 1.2 percent rate. The countercyclical
effect of government spending in 2008--including discouraged elderly
workers deciding to "retire" and sign up for social security
and Medicare benefits and larger and longer claims for unemployment--is
quite evident in the data for 2008; real personal income per capita
contracted 1.3 percent; excluding transfers, it fell 2.4 percent.
[GRAPHIC 3 OMITTED]
Discretionary income. Another extension of BEA's disposable
income would be discretionary income, which would attempt to measure
both the economic welfare of the average household and their ability to
spend on big-ticket items over the course of business cycles.
Discretionary income is calculated as the income left over after paying
for basic household expenses. In other words, it measures the money that
households can use for items, such as autos, vacations, entertainment,
college educations, or put into savings.
Discretionary income, which is sometimes confused with disposable
income, is used by investment firms to estimate funds available for
saving or investment, by banks and credit card companies to estimate a
customers ability to take on mortgages and additional consumer debt, by
marketers to identify households with discretionary income to spend on
their products, and by individuals to plan personal budgets. The
definitions of discretionary income vary, but used in these contexts,
they are quite similar to those used in the poverty literature: income
after taxes and after spending on basic expenses, such as rent or
mortgage, utilities, insurance, medical, transportation, child care,
property maintenance, and food. (7)
Deducting the amount that consumers spend on such goods and
services as food, shelter, and medical care can offer a rough notion of
what households have left over to spend on more discretionary items. A
measure calculated in this manner would not aim to determine how much
spending on, say, food or housing is necessary. Indeed, during times of
economic stress, a household may be able to cut back somewhat on their
spending on food in the short run and in the longer run may be able to
move to a less expensive house or apartment. Thus, basic expenses are
not completely fixed, but they represent expenditures that are more
difficult to adjust than expenditures on other, more discretionary goods
and services.
Exactly what should be deducted in deriving discretionary income
will require further study. The definition should reflect the purpose of
the measure. If the purpose is to derive a measure of growth in
household income, then the items to be deducted might be defined as a
group of basic goods. Such goods would account for a smaller share of
spending by higher income households than for lower income households.
However, if the measure is intended as a measure for business cycle
analysis, the definition might focus on goods and services whose share
of spending tends to rise during downturns in economic activity as
shrinking incomes cause households to reduce their spending on
discretionary spending more than their spending on the basics.
Chart 4 illustrates what a simple measure of real discretionary
income might look like. Over the last business cycle, the aggregate
measure of growth, real GDP, grew at an average annual rate of 2.4
percent. Real disposable income per capita, however, grew at a 1.8
percent annual rate, and real discretionary income per capita grew at an
average annual rate of 1.9 percent. (This larger growth rate reflects
the lower inflation rate in discretionary income, which excludes food
and energy costs, than in disposable income; in nominal terms,
discretionary income grew 4.9 percent, while disposable income grew 5.1
percent.) During the economic downturn of 2008, the differences are
larger. Real GDP rose 0.4 percent, and real disposable personal income
per capita fell 0.4 percent. Real discretionary income per capita fell
1.5 percent.
In addition to the differences in growth rates, there are
significant differences in levels between disposable and discretionary
income. Between 2000 and 2007, average real disposable personal income
per capita was $30,770, while average discretionary income was $16,333.
[GRAPHIC 4 OMITTED]
Refinements to the definition of discretionary income might well
produce more useful results than those presented here. For example, the
growth in discretionary income and disposable income over the last
business cycle in chart 4 may reflect the growth in average income,
including the gains in the share of income experienced by those in
higher income brackets and may not reflect the experience of most
households during that period. Household surveys during that period
suggest that most households--as measured by real median income did not
experience the growth in income or discretionary income shown in chart
4. And household surveys of consumer sentiment and of household's
assessment of the personal financial situation showed significant
declines between 2000 and 2007. (An example of what real median income
and real discretionary income might look like based on tax data is shown
in the next section.)
The small difference in growth also may reflect the need for a more
detailed breakdown of spending on basic items. For example, how much of
the increased spending on food and housing during this period was for
steaks rather than hamburger, or for larger houses?
Alternatively, it may be necessary to rely on a definition that
uses spending by lower income households as a measure of basic spending
such as that used in the poverty literature or another alternative used
by the Conference Board (Franco 2007) and in an earlier Census Bureau study (1989). Those studies defined discretionary income as the incomes
of households whose after-tax income was at least 30 percent higher than
the average expenditures of households with similar characteristics
(income, age, occupation, education, number of earners, and other
demographic characteristics).
A refined measure of discretionary income might prove helpful in
assessing the income that households have available to increase spending
and saving over the course of the business cycle Such estimates would be
especially helpful if paired with the type of integrated financial and
household statistics described below to analyze changes in saving, debt,
and net worth.
One such refinement of discretionary income would be to move from
personal income, which includes supplements to wages as well as transfer
payments, as a starting point to a cash-based measure, which excludes
supplements but includes transfers. However, calculating a cash measure
for discretionary income would be difficult and would require
disaggregation and separate estimates for different groups. For example,
the discretionary income of workers and of retirees might look quite
different. Working families' cash incomes would be reduced by taxes
and contributions to pensions and health plans, while retired
households' cash incomes would be raised by transfer payments and
pension payments. Further, working households may have higher spending
on housing and other basics relative to retired households. Such
decomposition is possible, but would require disaggregated income,
spending, and transfer payment data from such sources as the Bureau of
Labor Statistics (BLS) Survey of Consumer Expenditures, IRS data, Census
Bureau Consumer Expenditure Survey data, and federal and state and local
budget and program information.
Distribution of incomes. Per capita or other average measures of
income may not accurately reflect the economic position of most
households. Adding information on median income or income growth by
deciles to the national income accounts could significantly aid in
tracking the distribution of gains from economic growth. The ability to
decompose growth in the context of the national accounts is especially
useful because the accounts provide a more comprehensive measure of
income than that captured by most other measures. Income in the national
accounts includes the noncash value of housing, financial and other
services as well as noncash employer contributions for health insurance,
pensions, and other benefits. It also adjusts for underreporting of
income. As a result, the national accounts measures are broader than
measures of hourly wages for production or nonsupervisory work,
tax-based administrative data, or survey-based measures of median
household income, which tend to underrepresent both noncash income and
the incomes of low- and high- income groups.
National accounts measures of income have the additional advantage
of being deflated by appropriate chain-weighted measures that address
some of the weighting and other biases associated with fixed-weight
indexes. The national accounts price indexes, such as the personal
consumption expenditures price index, also are consistent in their
coverage of items covered by the accounts.
As a result, national accounts-based estimates of average incomes
have led to discussions about the gains from economic growth. The main
speculation has been on whether the higher average income growth shown
in the national accounts reflects a more complete picture of household
growth than the measures based on median income, which have grown more
slowly.
Because one of the primary uses of the national accounts is
measuring economic growth and the impact of growth on the nation's
income, there is increasing interest in understanding how the gains from
growth are distributed. In recent years, evidence indicates that an
increasing share of the gains from income growth have accrued to the
upper income groups. Studies by Piketty and Saez (2007) using tax data,
found that between 1993 and 2006, the average real income per family in
the bottom 99 percent grew at about 1.1 percent per year. During the
same period, however, average real income growth per family in the top 1
percent was 5.7 percent. Data from household surveys conducted by the
Census Bureau show a smaller difference in income growth between
households at the top and the bottom of the distribution than IRS data
but show a similar trend.
Another perspective on the same issue is illustrated in chart 5.
Over 2000-2007, real disposable personal income grew at a 2.7 percent
annual rate, and real disposable personal income per capita grew at a
1.8 percent annual rate. In contrast, a rough measure of real after-tax
income for the median income taxpayer rose at a 1.2 percent annual rate,
and real discretionary income for the median income taxpayer grew at a
1.4 percent annual rate (this higher growth rate reflects the lower
inflation rate in discretionary income, which excludes energy costs,
than in disposable income). (8)
[GRAPHIC 5 OMITTED]
Using such data to develop estimates of the distribution of
personal income in the national accounts is not a new concept. Kuznets
recognized the value of distributional measures while working on
National Income and Its Composition, 1919-1938 (1941), and he produced
estimates in his volume, Shares of Upper Income Groups in Income and
Savings (1953), in which he developed estimates of the share of income
accruing to the top 5 percent of the population.
In the past, BEA produced estimates of the nation's purchasing
power according to the size of family income and the distribution of
incomes across families. The first estimates were published in the
supplement "Income Distribution in the United States by Size,
1944-1950" to the 1953 SURVEY OF CURRENT BUSINESS. The estimates
were useful for marketing studies and to researchers assessing the
economic welfare and purchasing power of households. These estimates
were periodically updated in SURVEY articles until they were
discontinued in 1965 because of lack of resources.
Increased availability of administrative tax data, technological
advances in data storage capacity, and more computing power provide the
potential to add a distributional element to existing measures of income
in the national accounts. Today, it is increasingly important that we
understand not only how income from current production is shared between
labor and capital but also how that income, and the purchasing power
associated with it, is shared among households and why.
Regional income
Within BEA's regional accounts, there are two adjustments to
personal income that would be useful in providing alternative measures
of the differential impact of growth, and recessions, across the
country. The first adjustment to personal income would be to provide a
cash measure of income, which would be useful in measuring the income
available for consumption or saving in each region. In BEA's
regional accounts, state, metropolitan area, and county personal income
from pensions is measured by the expenses of production; personal income
includes the contributions of employers to pension funds and the
earnings on those investment funds rather than the income paid to
retirees from the fund. (9) Calculating income on a cash basis, which is
counting actual money received instead of contributions to a pension
plan, shows that the amount of income varies widely across states. Chart
6 illustrates the effect of recording pension incomes on a cash basis by
state. Areas with large pension contributions--such as the District of
Columbia, Maryland, and Virginia, each with a large number of federal
workers--have lower cash personal income than personal income. Other
states, such as Florida, with large retirement populations and lots of
income receipts from retirement funds (and lower wage and salary
incomes) tend to have higher cash incomes.
Another adjustment would be to develop estimates of the
"real" incomes received by households across regions by
adjusting for differences in regional prices. Chart 7 uses experimental
work by BEA and BLS on regional prices to develop illustrative real
estimates by state. As can be seen, there are significant differences in
"real" per capita personal income due to differences in prices
across states. More rural, lower cost-of-living states--such as West
Virginia, North Dakota, and Missouri--would see their income per capita
raised relative to urban and higher cost-of-living areas, such as New
York, the District of Columbia, and Hawaii.
[GRAPHIC 6 OMITTED]
The experimental estimates of regional prices and real income
presented here are based on work by Aten and D'Souza (2008). They
used price data that are available across all states, mainly Census
Bureau housing price data, and the relationship between those prices and
the prices of all other goods and services in the BLS urban areas to
estimate average prices for all goods and services for the 50 states and
the District of Columbia. (Because metropolitan areas account for such a
large share of overall prices and each state's economic activity
and given the share of housing in overall prices, the extrapolation seems to produce reasonable results.) However, further work needs to be
done toward developing methodologies that ensure that growth in the
extrapolated annual state price indexes are consistent with the growth
in BLS area and BEA national price indexes. Also, benchmark estimates
may be needed to more solidly anchor estimates for states less well
covered by BLS urban area statistics. Finally, the initial work by Aten
and D'Souza needs to be modified to be consistent with the coverage
and definitions of personal income.
[GRAPHIC 7 OMITTED]
Business income
In addition to wages and salaries, income from sole proprietors,
partnerships and other small businesses is an important component of
household income and an indicator of how well the average household is
doing. Despite the importance of this type of income, there is no
integrated picture of small business activity in the national accounts,
and existing aggregates of business activity and income often obscure
the differential change in the condition of small businesses versus
large businesses and the change across industries and regions. Business
income in the national accounts is split between corporate and
noncorporate income and within noncorporate income between farm and
nonfarm income. This limited detail provides limited information to aid
policymakers in formulating the many programs targeting assistance to
small business.
A significant portion of business income in the NIPAs is currently
benchmarked to IRS tax return data. In addition to their current
importance in measuring aggregate business, tax data can also be a rich
source of information for measuring the contributions made to GDP and
household income by small businesses. Alternative measures of business
income could be considered that focus on business characteristics rather
than on legal form of organization (that is, corporate income versus
proprietors' income), that better isolate the business income
passed through directly to households, or that provide information that
identifies contributions to growth in business income by businesses of
different sizes, where size may be identified, for example, by size of
assets or total receipts.
It could be argued that the current distinction between corporate
and noncorporate business income obscures the economic contributions of
certain small businesses organized as Subchapter S-corporations
(S-corps). Unlike generally larger Subchapter C-corporations (C-corps),
S-corps do not pay a corporate level income tax, and for tax purposes,
business income is passed directly through to business owners. In the
national accounts, business income and profits of both C-corps and
S-corps are aggregated in the measure of corporate profits. This
presentation masks the differential growth rates and changing
contributions to corporate profits between C-corps and S-corps in recent
years. For example, according to IRS data, between 1994 and 2006,
S-corps as a share of the number of total corporate businesses increased
from 46.7 percent to 68.4 percent (chart 8). As a share of total
business receipts for corporations, the share attributable to S-corps
increased from 18.3 percent in 1994 to 26.2 percent in 2006.
[GRAPHIC 8 OMITTED]
BEA is examining the feasibility of developing supplemental
measures of small business based on IRS tax data, BLS and Census Bureau
work on small business employment and growth, and other research on
small business and its role in the economy.
Assessing the Sustainability of Trends in the Economy
Public and private decisionmakers tasked with assessing the
sustainability of trends in the economy would also benefit from
highlighting various data that are already included in the national
accounts or that could be derived from the existing national accounts
and their underlying source data.
Net domestic product and net investment
Since the U.S. national accounts were developed in the 1930s by
Simon Kuznets and his colleagues, there has been a recognition of the
need to calculate a measure of income and production that nets out the
capital and natural resources used up in production. Similarly, business
accounting deducts the cost of depreciation and depletion in calculating
profits.
In the national accounts, the "G" in GDP stands for gross
to indicate that depreciation has not been subtracted out. Net domestic
product is equal to GDP less depreciation or what BEA calls the
consumption of fixed capital. Net domestic product is a rough measure of
sustainable income, that is, the amount of consumption that is
sustainable after putting aside the amount of resources necessary to
replace the productive capital stock used up in production.
Alternatively, it can be described as the amount that can be consumed
without reducing the consumption of future generations.
BEA has produced estimates of net domestic product and net domestic
income for decades, but they have received little attention. Yet over
time, real net domestic product and real net domestic income can produce
significantly different estimates than the commonly referenced GDP and
gross domestic income estimates. For example, between 2000 and 2007, GDP
grew at a 2.4 percent annual rate, and net domestic product (NDP) grew
at a 2.2 percent rate (chart 9). During the downturn in 2008, GDP
increased 0.4 percent, while net domestic product was unchanged.
BEA also produces estimates of net domestic investment, which
deducts depreciation from gross domestic fixed investment for a measure
of net additions to wealth. Like net domestic income, net fixed
investment looks quite different from gross investment (chart 10).
For example, between 2000 and 2007, on average, nearly 62 percent
of gross business investment simply replaced capital used up in the
production process; that is, only $927 billion of the nearly $2.4
trillion in gross business fixed investment represented a net addition
to the future productive potential of the domestic capital stock. Over
time, the two measures also produce quite different results. For
example, over the last business cycle, gross investment grew at 1.5
percent, while net domestic investment contracted 1.9 percent.
Asset values, saving, and consumption
The notion of sustainability is also relevant to the housing and
financial bubbles that the nation experienced over the last decade and
their impact on saving, consumption, and overall economic performance.
Although the existing GDP and related accounts did a good job in
measuring the evolving path of the real economy, supplementary data
derived from integrated financial accounts might have helped
policymakers, analysts, and investors by highlighting how out of line
housing and equity prices were and how big an adjustment was required.
New statistics that better highlight emerging trends in markets could
focus attention on asset price anomalies and affect policy in the way
that GDP, inflation, or the unemployment rate affect fiscal and monetary
policy. While some attribute the current downturn to the effect of
monetary policy on asset inflation and of regulatory policies that
failed to confront excessive risk taking, good statistics can play a key
role in forming public policy by highlighting the magnitude of emerging
problems and by aiding in the building of public consensus about policy
action.
[GRAPHIC 9 OMITTED]
[GRAPHIC 10 OMITTED]
Chart 11 shows the rise in the value of the U.S. housing stock
relative to personal income and GDP. Between 2000 and 2007, the value of
the U.S. housing stock rose from 1.1 times personal income to 1.4 times
personal income, as housing prices rose an average 9.2 percent annually,
while personal income rose an average 4.8 percent annually. While part
of this increase in housing prices was driven by a drop in mortgage
rates, ultimately housing prices are dependent on personal income or
expected future capital gains on housing investment. At some point, the
price increase was signaling what later turned out to be an
unsustainable bubble. The regular publication of ratio data such as the
ratio of the value of housing to personal income shown in chart 11 along
with data on leveraging in housing markets shown in chart 13 might have
been helpful in recognizing the size and extent of that bubble earlier.
Additional ratio data of household net worth to personal income, which
was rising over this period, help to understand households'
willingness to take on incremental debt (chart 13).
[GRAPHIC 11 OMITTED]
Chart 12 shows the rise in U.S. equity prices relative to GDP (log
scale) since the mid-1990s. In the latter half of the 1990s, higher
growth in GDP and productivity, new technologies, and higher
expectations for trend growth in GDP helped to raise growth in stock
prices substantially relative to GDP; the run-ups that ended in 2000 and
2008 were followed by 41 and 48 percent declines in stock prices,
respectively.
Over the long run, equity prices rise at roughly the same rate as
GDP and corporate profits. Between 1977 and 2009, stock prices and GDP
both rose at an average annual rate of roughly 7 percent. This makes
sense because over time, growth in stock prices must come from growth in
the economy or a higher rate of return to capital investments. However,
there have been periods when growth in stock prices consistently
outpaced growth in GDP, particularly the period in the 1950s and 1960s,
which was followed by a market correction and then a prolonged period
when growth in stock prices consistently lagged GDP. The historical
record is a useful reminder that identifying divergences from trend is
easier than predicting when trends will end. Nonetheless, regularly
presenting data on the relationship between asset prices and underlying
real variables can be important to investors and policy officials
monitoring monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policies that affect asset
prices.
[GRAPHIC 12 OMITTED]
[GRAPHIC 13 OMITTED]
Chart 13 shows the share of the increase in household net worth
(saving) that came from saving out of current income as compared with
capital gains on homes or investments. Between 2000 and 2007, households
saw their net worth rise from $42.0 trillion to $62.6 trillion. (10) In
response, households saw little need to save out of current income; the
personal saving rate dropped from 2.3 percent to 0.6 percent. There
seemed to be little need for households to be concerned about the future
because "saving" through appreciation in their portfolio was
more than offsetting the drop in their saving out of current income, and
the ratio of net worth to disposable income was actually increasing.
These unsustainable trends--based on the unsustainable rise in housing
and equity prices--not only had significant implications for the
adequacy of household retirement assets but also significant
implications for the U.S. and world economy; U.S. saving out of current
income has risen significantly since the recession began, and the share
of U.S. GDP accounted for by consumer spending has fallen to below 70
percent.
These figures, which are based on available data, illustrate how
far out of line prices were in the housing and stock markets and the
extent to which the household saving rate out of current income was
unsustainable. If BEA were to expand its dissemination of charts and
analytical ratios such as these, this information could be useful to
decisionmakers who need to identify and anticipate future imbalances.
There was also a gap in macroeconomic data to warn of growing
imbalances in credit markets. As Palumbo and Parker (2009) have shown,
available data only show a slightly higher average leverage ratio in the
financial sector--l.03 in the late 1990s, compared with an average ratio
of 0.97 over the previous two decades--indicating that the U.S. data are
too aggregated to isolate the dramatic increase in leveraging that was
taking place in mortgage banks, other financial institutions, and
special purpose entities (chart 14).
Because the data were too aggregated, detailed data on maturity of
financial instruments to identify misalignment of assets and
liabilities--such as detailed data by type of instrument, such as how
much of U.S. international bond sales were of collateralized subprime
loans--were also missed.
A more complete list of data that would be required to address the
gaps in the financial data include (1) more complete data on those
institutions that played a large role in the crisis--hedge funds,
private equity funds, structured investment vehicles, (2) more detailed
data by type of instrument, by maturity, on valuation by type of
instrument, by ultimate owner rather than counterparty, and on special
purpose entities, and (3) more data on leverage by institution and
instrument.
All of these data could be collectible through the existing
reporting systems of the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve
Board and should correspond with information required under any new
regulatory reporting systems that emerge from the proposals currently
before the Congress.
Through new data and the publication of charts and analytic ratios,
BEA could provide additional tools for macroeconomic analysts and
policymakers. In the past, BEA produced a monthly journal, Business
Conditions Digest, and a special cyclical indicators section of the
SURVEY that presented analytic information on evolving economic
conditions in charts and ratios. The Business Conditions Digest and the
cyclical indicators section were eliminated as a result of budget
constraints. While the return to the publication of the leading
indicators component of those charts and ratios is not consistent with
BEA's mission and would be duplicative of private sector efforts,
the publication of selected ratios and data on sustainability, such as
those discussed above, might be an efficient means of providing
economists with tools they could use to address the integration of risk,
finance, and the real economy currently being called for by voices
within and outside the economic profession. (11)
[GRAPHIC 14 OMITTED]
Next Steps
This paper has presented possible alternative measures of economic
activity that could expand the usefulness of the existing national
accounts in understanding the distribution of the growth in incomes and
the sustainability of trends in the economy and their implications for
future growth. Few of the proposals here are completely new, and some of
the suggestions are nearly as old as the initial set of national income
accounts developed by Kuznets and others. However, the magnitude of the
current downturn and the differences between aggregate growth and growth
across households, sectors, and regions of the country suggest the need
for a review of the use of the national accounts, which were first
developed during the great depression.
The development of such new data will follow the steps that BEA has
always taken in the development of new estimates. First, the methods,
source data, and experimental estimates will be subjected to an internal
and external review to ensure that they meet BEA's standards for
accuracy, reliability, timeliness, and relevance. Second, prototype
estimates will be published for public comment by users of the national
accounts. Finally, after this period of review and adjustment is
completed, BEA will begin regular publication of these new and more
detailed data as part of its regular monthly, quarterly, and annual
estimates.
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(1.) Gross national product is the market value of goods and
services produced by labor and property supplied by U.S. residents,
regardless of where they are located. It was used as the primary measure
of U.S. production prior to 1991, when it was replaced by GDP, which is
that market value of goods and services produced within the United
States.
(2.) "National Time Accounting: The Currency of Life"
includes analyses and critiques of the time-use accounts, including one
comparing the time-use accounts to existing national accounts (Kruger
and others 2009); see "National Time Accounting and National
Economic Accounting" (Landefeld and Villones 2009).
(3.) Work such as Nordhaus and Tobin (1973), the Genuine Progress
Indicator (2007), the World Development Indicators (World Bank 2009),
and the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare are examples of the range
of efforts that have been designed to spur further work on the regular
production of broader measures of social welfare. While these efforts
have been much discussed and debated, there has never been sufficient
consensus on the difficult issues involved to produce a common set of
concepts or methods or a widely accepted regular set of estimates that
were used for analytical or policy purposes.
(4.) For more information on BEA's satellite account work, see
the following: "Integrated Economic and Environmental Satellite
Accounts" (Landefeld and Carson 1994b), "Accounting for
Household Production" (Landefeld, Fraumeni, and Vojtech 2009),
"Accounting for Nonmarket Household Production" (Landefeld and
McCulla 2000), "U.S. Transportation Satellite Accounts" (Fang,
Han, Okubo, and Lawson 2000), "An Ownership-Based Framework of the
U.S. Current Account" (Lowe 2009), "BEA's 2006 Research
and Development Satellite Account" (Okubo, and others 2006), and
"Toward a Health Care Satellite Account" (Aizcorbe, Retus, and
Smith 2008).
(5.) It would also exclude the interest and dividends earned by
pension funds, which are included in personal income as part of personal
interest and dividend income.
(6.) The period of 2000-2007 represents the peak-to-peak annual
growth for the last business cycle.
(7.) Several investment banks including Deutsche Bank and Goldman
Sachs have developed measures of discretionary income, which deduct
taxes and basic or fixed expenses, and add net borrowings to obtain a
measure of cash discretionary income.
(8.) After-tax income for the median income taxpayer is computed
from line item tabulations of Form 1040 data for the median income
taxpayer group from IRS Statistics of Income in order to (1) include all
cash income including the full value of pension, social security, and
unemployment benefits; (2) adjust proprietors' and partnership
income for misreporting (using BEA's aggregate adjustments); and
(3) deduct federal and estimated state and local taxes (using BEA's
aggregate federal to state and local tax ratios). Discretionary income
was computed using the same list of basic expenses described above. The
consumer spending for the median taxpayer was estimated using BLS
Consumer Expenditure Survey (CE) data for the household decile corresponding to the taxpayer median. The CE spending was adjusted using
the ratio of personal consumption expenditures for each category of CE
spending to adjust to the NIPA control totals. The term
"taxpayer" is roughly equivalent to the Census Bureau
definition of a household in that a taxpayer unit can include a single
personas well as a group, unlike the Census Bureau definition of a
family, which includes two or more related persons.
(9.) The pension earnings are recorded as owned by current workers
and counted as part of personal interest and dividend income.
(10.) Federal Reserve Board flow of funds data; available at
www.federal reserve.gov/econresdata/default.htm.
(11.) See Coy (2009), "What Went Wrong With Economics? (2009),
and Stiglitz (2009).