uses of national income data a2 economics. aims and objectives aim: understand uses of national...
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Uses of National Income Data
A2 Economics
Aims and Objectives
Aim:
• Understand uses of national income data.
Objectives:
• Assess problems with using GDP as a measure of living standards
• Define HDI, HPI, MDP & MI
• Explain how these measures measure standards of living and welfare
• Analyse HDI internationally
• Evaluate the economics of happiness
GDP, GNP & NI – Poor Measures of Living Standards
GDP
• Value of output produced by resources in the UK
GNP
• Output produced by resources within the UK, plus net property income (interests, profits, dividends flowing in minus property flowing out) from abroad.
NI
• Output produced by resources in the UK, plus net property income from abroad, minus depreciation from the UK’s capital equipment.
Ignores the effect growth has on leisure and welfare, therefore difficult to assess if there has been significant changes in living standards.
GDP per capita can rise, yet the distribution of income can become more unequal.
Excludes non-monetised sector, such as unpaid labour which contributes to GDPEconomic growth may
lead to negative externalities which affect living standards. GDP over estimates living standards.
Reasons Poor
Measure
GDP incompletely
measures output
Distribution of income
Ignores value of leisure
Negative externalities
Alternative Measures of Standards of Living
• Human Development Index
• Human Poverty Index
• Measure of Domestic Progress
• Misery Index
Human Development Index (HDI)
• A measure of economic welfare based on three indicators – standard of living, life expectancy and educational attainment.
• The maximum value of HDI is 1.
• The closer a country’s HDI is to 1 the greater its’ human development in terms of these three indicators.
• Data
• http://hdr.undp.org/en/statistics/
HDI Rank
Country Life Expectancy 2011Education Index
2011GDP Per Capita PPP$ Terms
2009HDI Value 2011
Top 10
1 Norway 81.1 0.985 47,676 0.943
2 Australia 81.9 0.981 34,259 0.929
3 Netherlands 80.7 0.931 36,358 0.91
4 United States 78.5 0.939 41,761 0.91
5 New Zealand 80.7 1 24,706 0.908
6 Canada 81 0.927 34,567 0.908
7 Ireland 80.6 0.963 36,278 0.908
8 Liechtenstein 79.6 0.818 .. 0.905
9 Germany 80.4 0.928 32,255 0.905
10 Sweden 81.4 0.904 32,314 0.904
28 UK 80.2 0.815 32,147 0.863
Bottom 5
183 Chad 49.6 0.219 1,181 0.328
184 Mozambique 50.2 0.222 804 0.322
185 Burundi 50.4 0.353 356 0.316
186 Niger 54.7 0.177 626 0.295
187 Congo 48.4 0.356 290 0.286
Human Poverty Index (HPI)
• A measure of economic welfare based on four basic dimensions of human life: longevity, knowledge, economic provisioning and social inclusion.
• % of people likely to die before the age of 60
• % of people whose ability to read and write is far from adequate
• proportion of the population with disposable incomes of less than 50% of the medium
• proportion of long term unemployed (12 months of more)
Human Poverty Index & UK
• More than 100 million people are relatively poor within all of the twenty-four OECD countries
• In the UK, 13.5% of the population have an income below the income-poverty threshold of 50% of average income
• 21.8% of the population in this country are said to be "functionally illiterate" - unable to read many basic instructions on medicine bottles or read stories to their children
• The UK ranked 14th (out of 17) for long-term unemployment
• Sweden has the lowest overall incidence of human poverty followed by the Netherlands and Germany. The worst country is the USA followed by Ireland and the UK
The Misery Index (MI)
• A measure of economic welfare constructed by adding the unemployment rate to the inflation rate on the assumption that a high inflation and unemployment rate means a higher level of economic and social costs for a country.
• Guardian Article
Measure of Domestic Progress (MDP)
• A measure of economic welfare designed to reflect progress in quality of life and progress towards a sustainable economy by factoring in the social and environmental costs of growth, and benefits of unpaid work such as volunteer work and house work.
• Essentially is the ‘Economics of Happiness’
• Article
Measures of Standard of Living and Economic Welfare
• Having discussed and analysed the different measures of economic welfare and standards of living, which do you feel is the most accurate?
• What do you feel are the limitations of these measures?
– HDI
– HPI
– MI
– MDP
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