• What Will Succeed GDP? by Diane Coyle

    From Oleg Smirnov@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 10 00:15:01 2022
    XPost: soc.culture.russian

    2019-02-15 Oleg Smirnov, <news:q453m6$qh2$1@os.motzarella.org>

    GDP is a useful indicator but it's still not fully reliable.

    The unaccounted economic turnover needs to be somehow estimated.
    I mean the deals people may have among themselves without notifying
    the state apparatus. Prevalence of such practices depends on how
    much people trust each other, and how much they tend to rely on the
    state in resolving disputes, - it's culturally specific.

    Ignoring of the unaccounted turnover understates the GDP, but on the
    other hand, a reliable technique to estimate its value in monetary
    units may be a non-simple thing.

    Some controversial recent Russia news.

    | <https://tinyurl.com/2s4x7ynw> newsreadonline.com
    |
    | The deputy from the Communist Party of the Russian Federation
    | Arefiev estimated the harm from the shadow economy in Russia at 136
    | trillion a year .. "We are losing 136 trillion rubles a year -
    | that's six annual budgets! If we divide this amount by the entire
    | population of our country, together with newborns, it turns out that
    | each person was robbed for one million rubles a year," the
    | politician said .. The parliamentarian's reaction was caused by the
    | published data of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) that the
    | size of the shadow market in Russia is 38 percent of GDP ..

    The MP's reasoning is beside the point. "Shadow market" doesn't mean
    that the amount of this market is 'taken' from people, while it might
    be 'given' to them. Various things contribute to the shadow market:
    employers report to the state only a part of the salaries they pay to
    their employees; shops report to the state only a part of their trade
    turnover; organizations and private persons provide each other with
    some services and report to the state only a part of the operations.

    They pay lesser taxes and they get legal risks. If they pay taxes in
    full they would have to set higher prices to their goods and services
    to compensate it. The smaller shadow market is, the better it is from
    the perspective of sanity and ability to control 'justice' and the
    like, but even in the 'shadow' form it still contributes to the total
    amount of goods and services, so if the above 38% claim is true, one
    should multiply the Russia's GDP to 1.4 to get more realistic figure.

    The fact of shadow market basically means that people don't tend to
    consider the state 'honest' economic and regulatory actor, and in the
    Russia's case it's likely rooted in the historical Soviet practices.
    Throughout the Soviet time, government's manipulations with national
    currency, government loans etc were not in favor of private interest. Culmination moment of such a 'pragmatic' approach was the freeze of
    bank deposits in the very Soviet end <https://tinyurl.com/2x4wm68u>.

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