Follow/Subscribe

Gary Null's latest shows and articles:

Categories
Books






Hear Gary Null every day at Noon (ET) on
Progressive Radio Network!

Or listen on the go with the brand new PRN mobile app
Click to download!

 

Like Gary Null on Facebook

Gary Null's Home-Based Business Opportunity


Special Offer: Gary Null's documentary "American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten" DVD  is now available for $19.95! (regularly $40) Click here to order!
For more info. and to watch the Trailer for "American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten", Click here!


Gary Null Films

Buy Today!:

CALL 877-627-5065

 

   

Check out our new website "The Vaccine Initiative" at www.vaccineinitiative.org - Educating your choice through Research, Articles, Video and Audio Interviews...  


The latest from
Gary Null -
garynullfilms.com!
Now you can
instantly stream
Gary's films online. Each film costs 4.95, and you can view it straight from your computer!

Check out Big Green TV: Environmental Education for Kids!

Recommend Daphne Wysham - Measuring Progress -- A Better Alternative to the GNP (Email)

This action will generate an email recommending this article to the recipient of your choice. Note that your email address and your recipient's email address are not logged by this system.

EmailEmail Article Link

The email sent will contain a link to this article, the article title, and an article excerpt (if available). For security reasons, your IP address will also be included in the sent email.

Article Excerpt:

Published on Tuesday, October 25, 2011 by OtherWords

http://www.otherwords.org/articles/measuring_progress

Maryland's government is embracing an alternative way to monitor the state's wellbeing called the Genuine Progress Indicator, which brings depth to the analysis of the state's economic growth.

by Daphne Wysham

Tent cities and shacks sprung up on empty lots across the country. Food lines at soup kitchens wrapped around city blocks. Unemployment soared to 25 percent. Farmers watched helplessly as crop prices plummeted, then lost their land. The evidence was clear, yet at the height of the Great Depression, Congress lacked the tools to accurately measure just how the economy as a whole was faring. With no commonly accepted national income data, they had no guideposts upon which to base sound economic policy.

And so Congress turned to a young and promising Russian-American economist. U.S. lawmakers asked Professor Simon Kuznets of the National Bureau of Economic Research, who would go on to win the Nobel Prize in economics, to develop a data set to assess the state of the national economy. In 1937, Kuznets presented a vast volume of data on income to Congress. It became the Gross National Product (GNP).

With remarkable foresight and humility, Kuznets warned that his newly minted GNP shouldn't be used as an instrument of social policy. It could never adequately measure the things we value, he said, such as housework or caring for elderly parents. Nor, he warned, could the GNP distinguish between the growth of good and bad jobs. The data would be the same if workers earned their pay from employers who endangered their lives or guarded their health and safety. "Goals for more growth should be more growth of what and for what," Kuznets said.


Article Link:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Recipient Email:
Message: