While global Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has increased more than three-fold since 1950, economic welfare, as estimated by the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), has actually decreased since 1978. We synthesized estimates of GPI over the 1950-2003 time period for 17 countries for which GPI has been estimated. These 17 countries contain 53% of the global population and 59% of the global GDP. We compared GPI with Gross Domestic Product (GDP), Human Development Index (HDI), Ecological Footprint, Biocapacity, Gini coefficient, and Life Satisfaction scores. Results show a significant variation among these countries, but some major trends. We also estimated a global GPI/capita over the 1950-2003 period. Global GPI/capita peaked in 1978, about the ...
This paper argues that GDP growth in both developed and developing countries has associated costs th...
Although economists have long stressed the limitations of using GDP to evaluate standards of living,...
This paper gives some arguments for the need to redefine economic progress or to shift beyond Gross ...
While global Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has increased more than three-fold since 1950, economic we...
Nations need indicators that mesaure progress towards achieving their goals - economic, social and e...
The Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) is estimated as if nations operate within a closed economy. The...
For more than eighty years policy makers across the world have been targeting GDP growth as the main...
Right measurement is a powerful instrument for social progress; wrong or imprecise measurement a so...
We propose a simple summary statistic for a nation’s flow of welfare, mea-sured as a consumption equ...
What social progress is and how to measure it are seemingly plain but essentially intri-cate questio...
For more than 70 years, GDP has been the most common method for measuring the economic activity of n...
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is one of the most well-known and used economic indicator to measure th...
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is measured by adding up products and services that have a price tag fo...
This repository item contains a single issue of The Pardee Papers, a series papers that began publi...
GDP is a widely used category, which measures economic growth, and the government for public policy ...
This paper argues that GDP growth in both developed and developing countries has associated costs th...
Although economists have long stressed the limitations of using GDP to evaluate standards of living,...
This paper gives some arguments for the need to redefine economic progress or to shift beyond Gross ...
While global Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has increased more than three-fold since 1950, economic we...
Nations need indicators that mesaure progress towards achieving their goals - economic, social and e...
The Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) is estimated as if nations operate within a closed economy. The...
For more than eighty years policy makers across the world have been targeting GDP growth as the main...
Right measurement is a powerful instrument for social progress; wrong or imprecise measurement a so...
We propose a simple summary statistic for a nation’s flow of welfare, mea-sured as a consumption equ...
What social progress is and how to measure it are seemingly plain but essentially intri-cate questio...
For more than 70 years, GDP has been the most common method for measuring the economic activity of n...
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is one of the most well-known and used economic indicator to measure th...
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is measured by adding up products and services that have a price tag fo...
This repository item contains a single issue of The Pardee Papers, a series papers that began publi...
GDP is a widely used category, which measures economic growth, and the government for public policy ...
This paper argues that GDP growth in both developed and developing countries has associated costs th...
Although economists have long stressed the limitations of using GDP to evaluate standards of living,...
This paper gives some arguments for the need to redefine economic progress or to shift beyond Gross ...