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GDP - Gross Deception
Capitalism concentrates on production of
wealth more than distribution of wealth to satisfy the
needs, which is secondary in their view. Therefore, the
capitalist economic system has one aim, which is to
increase the country's wealth as a whole, and it works
to arrive at the highest possible level of production.
It considers that the achievement of the highest
possible level of welfare for the members of society
will come as a result of increasing the national income
by raising the level of production in the country, and
in enabling individuals to be able to take the wealth,
by being left free to work in producing and possessing
it.
So for capitalists the economy does not exist to satisfy
the needs of every individual, rather it is focused on
satisfying the needs of the wider community by raising
the level of production and increasing the national
income of the country. It believes that through the
availability of the national income, the distribution of
income among the members of society occurs, by means of
freedom of possession and freedom of work. So it is left
to the individuals to obtain what they can of the
wealth, everyone according to what he has of its
productive factors, whether all the individuals or only
some individuals are satisfied. This is the so called
''trickle-down effect'', a now-discredited theory of
distribution which holds that the concentration of
wealth in a few hands benefits the poor as the wealth
necessarily ''trickles down'' to them, mainly through
employment and as a result of investments made by the
wealthy. In most cases, this policy failed, as the
benefits were pocketed by a few.
GNP is used widely by the capitalist
nations as a measure of total production of all goods
and services produced in a nation (usually annually) and
central to a government’s national income accounts.
GNP was introduced during World War II as a measure of
wartime production capacity, since then the Gross
National Product (since changed to Gross Domestic
Product - GDP) has become a nation's foremost indicator
of economic progress. Yet the GDP was never intended for
this role. It is merely a gross tally of products and
services bought and sold. However it is now widely used
by policy makers, economists, international agencies and
the media as the primary scorecard of a nation's
economic health and well- being. Yet in this role it has
many serious flaws.
The GDP ignores everything that happens outside the
realm of monetized exchange, regardless of its
importance to well-being and the society. Hence values
(humanitarian, ethical, spiritual) other than material
values go entirely ignored.
The GDP records every monetary transaction as positive,
so the costs of social decay and natural disasters are
tallied as an economic advance. For example the terrible
effects of crime are recorded positively as adding
billions of dollars to the GDP due to the need for locks
and other security measures, increased police
protection, property damage, and medical costs.
Hurricane Andrew was a disaster for Southern Florida
USA, but the GDP recorded it as a boon to the economy of
well over $15 billion.
GDP ignores the drawbacks of living on
foreign assets. Where governments have increased their
spending by borrowing from abroad, this raises the GDP
temporarily, but the need to repay this debt becomes a
growing burden on the national economy. This downside of
borrowing from abroad is not reflected in the GDP.
The GNP was turned into the GDP - a
change that was deceptive and exploited by the
Capitalist nations. Under the old measure, the Gross
National Product, the earnings of a capitalist
multinational firm were attributed to the country where
the firm was owned and where the profits would
eventually return. Under the Gross Domestic Product,
however, the profits are attributed to the country where
the factory is located, even though the profits won't
stay there. This accounting shift has deceptively turned
many struggling nations into statistical boomtowns.
Statistics which are used in aiding the push for
globalisation and free trade. Conveniently, it hides a
basic fact: that the western Capitalist nations are
walking off with the resources of poorer nations and
calling it a gain for the poor.
Above all GDP ignores the distribution of
income. In effect the GDP hides the fact that a rising
tide does not lift all boats. From 1973 to 1993 in the
USA, while GDP rose by over 50 percent, wages suffered a
decline of almost 14 percent. Meanwhile, during the
1980s alone, the top 5 percent of households increased
their real income by almost 20 percent. Yet the GDP
presents this enormous gain at the top as a bounty to
all.
Furthermore the average number of poor
people averaged more than 30 million people over the
last 40 years in the US, with an average of 15% of the
population being poor. In the meantime, the gross
national product continued to increase drastically, over
the same period. The GDP grew from $400 billions to $10
trillions from 1959 to 2000. This very large increase in
the national product did not contribute to the
resolution of poverty. More than 30 million people
continue to be poor. Hence Capitalism superbly increases
the production of products and services, and hence
wealth. However this completely fails to resolve the
poverty of the individuals. The number of poor people
continues to grow.
In reality therefore GDP as a measure of a nation’s
economic well being is really a deception. It begins to
explain why people feel increasingly gloomy despite
official claims of economic progress and growth.
In Islam, the economic problem is focused on
distributing the means of satisfaction for individuals
i.e. the distribution of the funds and benefits to the
members of the nation or people, not on the needs which
the nation or the people require without having any
regard to every individual within the nation. In other
words, the problem is the poverty which occurs to the
individual not the poverty which occurs to the nation.
The concern of the Islamic economic system is focused
predominantly on satisfying the basic needs of every
individual, not the study of producing economic
commodity.
Islam makes the subject of study, the basic human needs
of man, as a human being, and the study of distributing
the wealth to the members of society to guarantee the
satisfaction of all their basic needs. Unlike capitalism
it is aware that the treatment of the poverty of a
country, through raising the level of production, does
not solve the problem of poverty for individuals.
Rather, Islam advocates the treatment of the poverty
problems of all the individuals, and the distribution of
the wealth of the country among them by addressing their
basic needs first, thus motivating all the people of the
country to work in increasing the national income.
Further Reading
Non-Muslim viewpoint
''Imagine an accountant who can add but can't subtract,
and who is so nearsighted he can't see past his nose.
That is the mentality behind the GDP. The GDP simply
adds up the money Americans spend and calls the result
growth and good, regardless of where the money went and
why''.
[Read]
''Say we wake up one morning and discover
we'll be getting a new bill each month---for air. The
Bush administration has decided to privatize the air;
corporations will now own it and charge for its use. ''
[Read]
''The President boasted of the ''longest peacetime
expansion of our history.'' That's how politicians
always talk. It sounds like truly wonderful news.
But what actually has been expanding? A lot of things
can grow, and do. Waistlines grow. Medical bills grow.
Traffic, debt, and stress all grow. We can't know
whether an ''expansion'' is good or not unless we know
what it includes. Yet the President didn't tell, and the
media hordes didn't ask, which was typical too.''
[Read]
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