Colin Murphy has a provocative column in the Sunday Business Post (January 27 - firewalled) about measuring our economy and national well-being. The traditional measure is GDP. The traditional yardstick is the higher the GDP per capita, the more prosperous the society. Maybe.
Even the originator of GDP, Simon Kuznets, had his doubts about that, as Colin points out:
‘Kuznet argued that spending that did not further the welfare of society – such as on armaments – should not be included but he was overruled. And he consistently warned against the over-interpretation of the data. National income and GDP were not measures of economic welfare, he stressed: to understand welfare you would need to know not merely what income amounted to but how it was distributed. ‘
And now the illegal narcotics trade and prostitution are included in GDP. How does that fit in with ‘economic welfare’?
A number of economists, sociologists, statisticians and activists have tried to come up with an alternative set of data to reveal a more effective picture of a nation’s wellbeing but the range is so extensive, the interactions complex and the permutations voluminous. Unsurprisingly, there is no consensus on how to do this.
The OECD has devised an interesting Better Life Index comprising housing, income, employment, community, education, environment, civic engagement, health, life satisfaction, safety, and work-life balance. But there are other indexes that have over a hundred measurements and it is difficult to come up with a single number that can compete with GDP.
For instance, someone in country A may have a higher income than someone in country B. But people in country B pay less on rent and receive free healthcare – benefiting from lower costs and security. Though income-poorer they may be better off than people in country A.
Another problem is that well-being can be a subjective matter. It’s not just about how objectively we compare, it’s how we feel about our situation.
In this spirit of exploring the different indicators I’d like to draw attention to three particular measurements that don’t get much airing. These are not conclusive tests or even the best indicators. But they do tell us something about people’s well-being.
Inability to Make Ends Meet
This is a subjective measurement contained in the EU Survey of Living Conditions that asks people how well they can make ends meet – that is, meet every day expenses. There are five responses: ‘with great difficulty’, ‘difficulty’, ‘some difficulty’, ‘fairly easily’ and ‘easily’.
Combining ‘great difficulty’, ‘difficulty’, and ‘some difficulty’ we find Ireland at the top of the EU high-income league. 61 percent expressed some type of difficulty in making ends meet – compared to a 32 percent average among other EU high-income countries. Irish households are nearly twice as likely to experience difficulty making ends and nearly four times the German rate. [It is worth noting the high French levels – could this be a contributing factor to the emergence of the gilet jaune protests?]
There is a difference, though, between ‘some’ difficulty and ‘great’ difficulty. How does Ireland fare in the specific difficulty categories?
Ireland leads the most difficult categories – more than twice the ‘great difficulty’ average. With ‘some difficulty’ Ireland ranks second behind France.
The only bright spot in these depressing numbers is that difficulty experiences are falling from even higher rates that were generated during the recession / austerity period.
Households experiencing ‘great ‘difficulty have halved since the peak in 2012/13 and are back to 2007 levels. Those experiencing difficulty has also fallen since the 2013 high and is nearly back to pre-crash levels. However, those experiencing ‘some’ difficulty are still close to the recession high and still significantly above pre-crash levels.
It should also be noted that had we returned to pre-crash levels (54.3) we would still be well above the EU high-income country average.
Unable to Meet Unexpected Expenses
The EU Survey on Living Conditions also asks households their ability to meet unexpected expenses. This differs from making ends meet as it refers to meeting a substantial cost such as replacing a broken cooker, boiler, fridge or car; or some other expense of equal value that is unexpected (a hole in the roof is another example).
Again, Ireland fares poorly.
We are the league leaders – four out of ten households are unable to meet unexpected expenses. This is considerably above the average of other EU high-income countries and more than twice the rate of Sweden that has the lowest level.
At least we are improving. A decade ago – in 2007 – the rate was 39.1 percent and rose to a recession / austerity high of 56.4 percent in 2012. However, even if we were to return to pre-crash levels we would still well above the average.
Living Standards: Actual Individual Consumption
Actual Individual Consumption (AIC) is used by the EU as a proxy for living standards. It combines consumer spending per capita and Government spending on goods and services for households (this includes services that the Government offers free or at below market-rates). It is adjusted for inflation and the purchasing power standard (PPS).
Ireland is at the bottom – far behind the average but also far behind the next lowest country, France. Ireland would have to increase AIC (real consumer spending and Government services) by 23 percent to reach the average. In fact, so poor do we rate in this measurement that we are behind Italy and not that much higher than Spain or Lithuania.
And we are still quite a bit away from the pre-crash level. In 2007, Irish AIC was 21,600 PPS. This fell to a recession low of 18,800 PPS in 2010. In 2017 this this has risen to 20,500 PPS but we still have a ways to get back to where we started a decade ago.
The one drawback with this measurement is that we shouldn’t assume that high consumer or social spending equates to well-being. Consumer spending may be poorly distributed (i.e. more spending by a small group at the top) and social spending may be inefficient. There is some co-relation with this graph and inability to make ends meet: France and Ireland are low in the AIC table and high in the making ends meet table. Germany is reverse. But for other countries there are slightly contrasting stories.
* * *
What do we do about this? We can make reasonable assumptions about why people are finding it hard to make ends meet: lack of income and low-pay, high rents, medical bills, cost of raising children, mortgage arrears, etc. However, we can make a more forensic analysis. Quite simply, we should ask people why they are finding it hard to make ends meet and what they need to make their situation better.
The CSO could be provided the resources to conduct this in-depth survey (and the resources would be minuscule). The results should give rise to a national debate, for clearly a significant proportion of households suffer inability to make ends meet and to meet unexpected expenses.
That doesn’t mean we have to wait for such results. We should start addressing the housing crisis in and of its own right. We should start giving employees greater collective rights in the workplace to increase enterprise efficiency and combat low-pay. We should go much, much further to combat precarious work.
However, rather than just assuming what people need, we ask the people themselves. This is the first step in getting people socially and economically engaged. It’s when people start determining the policy responses that substantial progress can be made.
In short: well-being is a political issue.
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