If economic growth is your nation's sole goal, you're going to get more economic growth. If you've got other priorities you want to add into the mix, growth might suffer a bit. How did the American public get themselves in such a place that they so firmly believe that if the latter happens, the sky's going to fall down and kill Baby Jesus?
The issue, always, is what kind of tradeoffs people think we're
making, or could make, and what are the merits of those tradeoffs.
To take an example, at least part of the reason France is
poorer than the United States is that the French policy environment is
designed in a variety of ways (workweek limitations, vacation mandates,
etc.) to encourage people to spend less time working and more time
engaged in leisure than is the American policy environment. France
could generate more GDP by shifting policies to encourage people to
spend more time doing paid, market workand less time doing other stuff.
[...]
Interestingly, I think technological advancements are, in many ways,
further muddying the waters here. Most peoples' blogs, I would say,
count firmly as hobbies, things they do just for their own amusement. Other blogs -- Josh Marshall's or Andrew Sullivan's, say -- are definitively professional
activities, work done as the primary means of earning a living. Lots of
others (including this one) are somewhere in the middle -- they have
some monetary value and some value as loss-leaders for other paid work
while also still having a lot of aspects of a pure hobby endeavor.
One aspect of the internet, however, is that it makes it much easier than it was in the past to gain an audience
for your hobbies since the distribution costs and necessary capital
investment are tiny. So you have lots of blogs that are pretty
definitively hobby endeavors from the writer's point-of-view but are
still read by non-trivial numbers of people. A site with 500 readers a
day isn't going to earn any money, but 500 people isn't nothing, and
the site clearly has some kind of value to those 500 people. And if you
have thousands -- tens of thousands -- of sites operating on those
terms, well, then, there's a lot of activity happening whose value isn't really being captured by financial exchanges.
And one could say the same of YouTube gambits like the Tony Blair video
I linked to earlier. Or public Flickr pages. And, of course, there's
open source software. As it happens, relatively few people use OpenOffice or NeoOffice instead of the Microsoft juggernaut,
but they're honestly just as good. One could imagine a situation in
which a few large institutions dump Microsoft, adopt the open source
alternatives, and it leads to a tipping point that destroys the
economic viability of non-trivial portions of the closed-source
software market. Something like that would register in the
macroeconomic indicators in a pretty odd way even though the value
would, in some sense, still be there.
Marx's badly discredited theory of value seems to me to have some
relevance in that sort of thing. A copy of OpenOffice has basically no exchange value but does have considerable use value. Maybe. Or maybe that's the wrong way to think about it.
One way or another, though, it's long been known that our main
economic statistics -- including, most prominently, GDP -- have flaws
as metrics. We use them, though, because they work pretty well and
because nobody's devised superior alternatives. There's no guarantee,
however, that the extent to which things like GDP, the CPI, and other
main indicators are imperfect metrics will stay constant over time.
Technology and society change, and things that used to be good
satisficing tools could become quite bad ones.