Around The Dial – April 18, 2012
Economic policy reports, blog postings, and media stories of interest:
- The New York Times profiles the economists of inequality.
- Robert Kuttner assesses the performance of Ben Bernanke.
- Policy Shop outlines the case for forgiving student loan debt.
- James Kwak points out Mitt Romney’s arithmetic problems.
- Jared Bernstein argues for applying labor standards to home health aides.
Mismeasuring Progress
Partha Dasgupta and Anantha Duraiappah point out the limitations of using statistics tied to gross domestic product as measures of social well-being.
The 2010 Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, commissioned by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, echoed the current consensus among social scientists that we are mismeasuring our lives by using per capita GDP as a yardstick for progress. We need new indicators that tell us if we are destroying the productive base that supports our well-being.
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The United Nations University’s International Human Dimensions Program (UNU-IHDP) is already working to find these indicators for its“Inclusive Wealth Report” (IWR), which proposes an approach to sustainability based on natural, manufactured, human, and social capital. The UNU-IHDP developed the IWR with support from the United Nations Environment Program, to provide a comprehensive analysis of the different components of wealth by country, their links to economic development and human well-being, and policies that are based on social management of these assets.
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The IWR represents a crucial first step in transforming the global economic paradigm, by ensuring that we have the correct information with which to assess our economic development and well-being – and to reassess our needs and goals. While it is not intended as a universal indicator for sustainability, it does offer a framework for dialogue with multiple constituencies from the environmental, social, and economic fields.
Where Federal Taxes Go
The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities breaks out just where “our federal taxes go.”
Around The Dial – April 17, 2012
Economic policy reports, blog postings, and media stories of interest:
- Working Economics explains racial and ethnic statistical categories.
- Naked Capitalism sees more problems with housing finance.
- Simon Johnson wonders if the US really faces “a fiscal crisis.”
- Paul Krugman warns against “Europe’s economic suicide.”
The Dilemmas Facing Community Colleges
The PBS News Hour reports on the problems facing community colleges as a result of budgetary pressures.
Watch California Community Colleges Face Tighter Budgets on PBS. See more from PBS NewsHour.



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