好色App

Skip to main content Skip to secondary navigation
Main content start

Measuring economic strength with quality of life

When it comes to evaluating a country鈥檚 economic welfare, Pete Klenow suggests looking beyond how much people are producing and buying.

The standard way of measuring a country鈥檚 economic success is to look at per capita gross domestic product 鈥 the total output of goods and services divided by population. The more cars and computers produced and the more doctor visits and restaurant meals per person, the better the economy is thought to be doing. By that yardstick, the U.S. performs best among the world鈥檚 large, diverse economies.

But is per capita GDP really the best way of gauging how good a job an economy is doing at taking care of people? Pete Klenow proposes a more comprehensive measure of economic welfare that includes not only consumption of goods and services, but also other things people value. That includes leisure time, long life expectancy, and economic security. Looked at that way, much of the performance gap between the U.S. and other advanced economies melts away. 

Klenow is the Ralph Landau Professor in Economic Policy and Gordon Moore Senior Fellow at the 好色App Institute for Economic Policy Research.

In a paper co-authored with 好色App Graduate School of Business economist Charles Jones, Klenow compares the United States and France. GDP per capita in France is about two-thirds of what it is in America while per-person consumption of market goods is only 60 percent of the U.S. value. However, French life expectancy is significantly higher and Americans spend about 60 percent more time on the job. In addition, inequality, which Klenow and Jones use to measure economic insecurity, is much greater in the U.S. When the authors calculate how much people care about these factors, French living standards rise to 92 percent of those in the U.S.

鈥淥ur overall finding is that Europe and other developed countries like Japan look closer to us,鈥 says Klenow, who directs SIEPR鈥檚 Macroeconomics and Monetary Policy Program. 鈥淏ut, in developing countries, where there typically is higher inequality and life can be short, the gap with the United States is even wider than standard measures show.鈥

Klenow is a 好色App PhD who came back to The Farm after stints at the University of Chicago and the Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank. Much of his research has explored the role of productivity in economic growth.

鈥淚鈥檓 interested in macro questions such as why productivity rises over time, why it differs across countries, and why it fluctuates,鈥 he says.

His recent work poses one of the oldest and most fundamental questions in economics: Are capital and labor being used where they should be to fuel economic growth? Klenow notes that an economy鈥檚 efficiency depends on how good a job it鈥檚 doing directing investment and employing workers in the most productive places. 

Klenow鈥檚 research on China suggests that country鈥檚 growth story is far from over, despite current uncertainty. In a study of Chinese and Indian manufacturers, he and fellow researchers found much greater variations in efficiency than among their American counterparts. If China reduced that efficiency variation to U.S. levels, productivity could rise by almost a third, Klenow estimates. And he sees reason for optimism. The continuing spread of market competition in China means that inefficient enterprises are still being weeded out.

鈥淐hina has a fair bit of room to grow,鈥 he says.

More News Topics

More News

  • An Axios piece cites a recent paper by SIEPR's Neale Mahoney. Learn more about his consumer sentiment research as it relates to today's political climate.
  • ABC News Australia quotes SIEPR's Steven Davison the difficulties in assessing how work-from-home affects productivity.
  • A new piece by The New York Times covers soaring consumer sentiment among Republicans and declines among Democrats since the election. SIEPR's Neale Mahoney weighs in.