Components of GDP
February 12, 2025
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In this article, we will discuss about healthcare. We will expose how GDP is opposed to common sense when it comes to healthcare. Also, we will explain why this fallacy is wreaking havoc in most countries around the world and what needs to be done to stop it.
In everyday life, expenditures on health care are considered to be a bad thing. The healthier a person is, the lesser healthcare related expenditures they will have. Hypothetically, if there were a community with absolutely no sick people, common sense would dictate that it is a successful community and that their way of living must be studied and emulated.
GDP sense, once again, works in stark contrast to common sense. GDP sense once again mindlessly counts the numbers. Zero expenditure on healthcare from community A is considered bad whereas $1 trillion expenditure on healthcare from community B is considered desirable.
In other words, the sicker the people of a community are, the more expenditure they will incur and the better it is considered for the economy! Once again this creates a fallacy that economics is an anti-social science. In reality, this is not the case. If true principles of economics are considered, then it is completely in harmony with the common sense view. It is GDP thinking that hijacks the economic principles and makes it antisocial by blindly considering higher expenditures as better.
Let’s take a deeper look at why this presupposition made by the GDP system is incorrect. The reasons are listed below:
In either scenario the money would be put to better use.
The strange part is that the GDP system counts the money that was spent on the treatment. However, it does not count the opportunity cost of the labor lost. Many economists argue that if this opportunity cost were considered, sick people would be the last thing that an economy would want. The healthier the people of an economy are, the more they can work and the more productive they can be. Hence, the potential GDP with a healthier economy is higher than an economy with sick and dying people.
It is only because the GDP system adds the credits while completely forgetting about the debits that this fallacy arises.
As a result of this dangerous fallacy, governments all over the world do not crack down on many products. Products such as sugar, tobacco and alcohol cause massive damage to public health. The explanation provided is that these products are somehow good from an economic point of view. As explained above that is not the case. Any product that makes the people sick reduces the potential GDP even though it may appear to be increasing it. The appearance is just an eyewash because of a faulty system.
Most of the developed countries in the world today are facing healthcare epidemics. In fact the more developed an economy is, the more expenditure there is on healthcare. Countries like United States have massive healthcare budgets. Medicines are so expensive that people with chronic diseases resort to smuggling from nearby Canada. Even countries like UK, Germany and Japan have astronomical healthcare costs.
The point is that these costs are red flags. Firstly the economy is making the people sick by working more and more and secondly it cannot offer them treatment. If GDP were a legitimate indicator, it would immediately highlight this issue to the decision makers. Instead, it projects rising healthcare costs as an economic boom.
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