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Lies,
damned lies, and statistics
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Marx argued that by his day economics had declined from a genuine
attempt to understand the workings of capitalism as, for instance, with
Adam Smith and David Ricardo, into a thinly disguised apology for
capitalism. Just look at any modern textbook – with their claim that
scarcity is eternal because human wants are infinite and their
introduction of “entrepreneurship” as being as essential to production
as natural resources, labour and machinery – and you can see how right
he was.
In one field of economics, however, there has been some progress since
Marx’s day: in measuring national income and output. Since the 1940s
governments have published figures for these. Everybody has heard of
“GDP” (Gross Domestic Product) and “growth” (which is the increase of
GDP from one year to the next) and Marx would surely have loved to have
had such figures. But there are shortcomings here too.

In particular how to treat government spending has been a problem, as
was again highlighted by a report published at the end of January by
Sir Tony Atkinson (who as plain A. B. Atkinson used to usefully concern
himself with statistics on the unequal distribution of wealth
ownership) for the Office of National Statistics on “The Measurement of
Government Output and Productivity for the National Accounts”.
Government Output? What output — surely the government as such produces
nothing, just consumes the output of the sector of the economy where
labour-power is applied to materials that originally came from nature
to produce commodities for sale? Yes, that’s just the point. But the
figure for GDP (which is supposed to be a measure of total output) is
obtained by counting spending by individuals on consumer goods and
services, by firms on new equipment, and by the government, and adding
them together. Including government spending in this involves
double-counting. This is recognised to some extent in the official
figures in that the payment of pensions, the dole, income support and
the like as well as the payment of interest on the National Debt are
excluded from government spending as being “transfer payments”. But,
logically, so too are the wages and salaries of government employees,
yet these are not excluded. Similarly, other government spending (as on
purchasing computers and bombers) is already included via the amount
for indirect taxes that enters into the prices of what individuals and
firms buy.
The artifice that the government statisticians found to get out of this
has been to treat government spending as productive, as resulting in a
“product” (education, health care, administration, law and order,
“defence”, though not “social security”). As a result, national output
is inflated by as much as 20 percent. The former state capitalist
countries of Russia and Eastern Europe did not count such government
spending as productive, i.e. did not double count it as part of output,
and when they adopted the same national accounting system as in
the rest of the capitalist world their GDPs jumped by 18-24 percent
depending on the country.
Why did statisticians in the West go down the road of pretending that
all government activity is productive? Probably because national
accounting developed at the same time as Keynesian economic policies
were first applied (and could even be said to have been developed to
underpin them), and Keynes attributed a key role to government
spending. Keynesian economics is now rejected, but not the counting of
government spending as an addition to output. Instead of getting itself
out of this hole by abandoning this statistical practice, the
government decided to keep on digging and appointed Sir Tony to come up
with ways of measuring government “output” in such a way as to be able
to take into account increasing “productivity” (the politicians’ “value
for money”).
If the Atkinson report’s recommendations are accepted this will inflate
GDP even more by artificially (and arbitrarily) increasing yet further
government “output”. Talk about cooking the books.
The Real Class Division
We’re supposed to be moving towards a more equitable society.
Well how
come class division is worse than ever, asks Paul Bennett. Here |
Meat, Money and Malnutrition
A Vegan society claims that meat is a cause of famine. So could
vegetarianism
really help feed the world, or is it all more complicated?Here |
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Changing the System
If you have no freedom to change your life you may as well be in
prison.
Workers in capitalism get more porridge than empowerment. Here |
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Brown Reorganises Poverty
£6.2 billion was returned to the Treasury in 2002-3 in unclaimed
benefits.
Does that mean claimants didn’t need the money? Here |
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To Contents Here
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To Socialist Party Here |
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