Our Obsession with Growth
The
most dangerous implication of the obsession with economic growth is that it may
create a society that is excluded from our economic activities, writes Arief
Anshory Yusuf, professor of economics at Padjadjaran University. (Antara Photo/Indrianto Eko
Suwarso)
Thirteen
economists, including a Nobel laureate and four former chief economists of
the World Bank, put forward the so-called Stockholm Statement of
development principles in 2016. Topping the list of eight key principles
is a warning that economic growth is not an end in itself.
Indeed, we
seem to be obsessed with economic growth. Economic growth – or growth, for
short – has been the headline of almost all economic discussions in the
public discourse or meetings at government offices and economic seminars. It
has always been No. 1 on the list of targets to be achieved in
annual, medium- or long-term economic planning or government budget documents.
Policy makers at the national and regional or local level normally mention
growth first in meetings to discuss contemporary or future economic issues. It
is not that other aspects of economic development, such as poverty, employment
and inequality, are excluded from the discussion, it is just that growth seems
to get more attention than it deserves.
Not Without Reason
This lopsided attention to
growth has many reasons. Some are valid, but some are questionable. Economic
growth is the rate of change over a certain period, such as yearly or
quarterly, of gross domestic product (GDP) at the national level or
gross regional domestic product (GRDP) at provincial or district level.
GDP and GRDP are basically the amount of total income earned by all owners of
production that operate in a said region. The main factors of production are
labor and capital, such as machinery, land and buildings.
The owner of
labor gets a wage or salary, while the owner of capital gets profit. It is
important to note that these elements of production operate under the
jurisdiction in which the GDP or GRDP is measured, but their owners do not
necessarily live in the same region. Hotels and restaurant in Bali or
Bandung, West Java, may generate high GRDP (therefore high economic
growth) from their activities, but their owners may live somewhere else.
Similarly, coal mining in Kalimantan may contribute a lot to that area's
growth, but this will not directly increase the prosperity of
its residents.
So why do we
seem to be obsessed with growth? First, it is a kind of a tradition; a global
tradition. The world – promoted by the World Bank – classifies the status
of countries to be poor (low income) or rich (high income) based on their
income (or GDP) per capita. Higher growth means higher GDP per capita and
higher status. Economic growth becomes the mantra to raise a country's
economic status to a higher level, such as from low-income to middle-income
or high-income. This mantra was spread widely to provincial and local
governments, which are given increasing authority over development policy
through decentralization. Secondly, GDP has a long history as among
the most robust economic indicators. This makes monitoring easier and more
reliable.
However,
among the most commonly held view, including among academia, on why income
per capita (and therefore growth) is important, is that income per capita
highly correlates with other important development indicators. Higher economic
growth will most likely translate to the improvement of other standard
indicators of welfare. How true is this view?
Does Growth Always Lead to
Prosperity?
Let us compare GRDP per capita
in provinces or districts with another commonly used monetary welfare
indicator, namely expenditure per person. Expenditure per person is used
in at least three well-known development indicators in Indonesia: Human
Development Index, poverty and inequality. Despite both being monetary
measurements, they are different in the most important way. GRDP per
capita is production-based, so it is prone to capital spillover across
jurisdiction (as discussed previously), while expenditure per person is
survey-based. It is estimated through a socioeconomic survey that aims to
represent the welfare of the residents of the jurisdiction (province or
district). That is, those who live in the jurisdiction. This is a very
crucial difference.
A simple
scatter-plot diagram between district GRDP per capita and expenditure per
capita shows a very weak correlation. On a scale of 0 to 1, the
correlation is only 0.37, which means higher economic growth in one region
will not always translate into a higher standard of living. It
also confirms the large inconsistency between the two most commonly used
development indicators in Indonesia.
A recent
study by the SDGs Center at Padjadjaran University and the United Nations
Development Program also suggests a startling finding. The study calculates the
cross-provincial correlation between GRDP per capita and 68 officially
published indicators of sustainable development and classifies the correlation
into four categories: high, moderate, low and no correlation. They found that
around two-thirds of the correlations are either low or no correlation.
Reasons for Inconsistency
The first factor is, of
course, the one outlined earlier. The larger the component of growth consists
of profit earned from capital, the larger the spillover outside the
jurisdiction where the economic activities occur. That is why regions that
largely depend on natural resources (capital-intensive sector) or the
financial sector will tend to have the largest gap between economic growth and
citizens' welfare. In a cross-country context where capital mobility and
ownership are very low, this may not be a big problem. But in a national
context, where capital ownership can be easily moved across jurisdictions,
such as between districts in one country, this can be a serious
issue. Here, economic growth or GRDP per capita may be a misleading
indicator of prosperity.
The second
factor is how income from economic growth remaining in the district
is distributed across residents. If the benefit of the economic growth is
only concentrated among the few, then it will reinforce the capital spillover.
They may spend the money somewhere else. And finally, the quality of the
institution or governance in the region also matters. Large royalties from
natural resources, for example, will end up benefiting only a few cronies in a
district with low-quality institutions.
Should We Be Worried?
Should we avoid the growth
obsession? Yes. It can lead to bad policy prescriptions. Think about, for
example, directing public infrastructure investment, such as water or
sanitation facilities. Should it go to low- or high-growth regions? If
growth is the main reason, then the answer is to low-growth regions in the
name of reducing inter-regional disparity. But what if the infrastructure is
needed more in regions with low prosperity despite high growth?
A
growth-promoting strategy can also be politically incorrect in a region with
high capital spillover. As the mayor or governor of a city or
province is elected by residents, the growth-promoting strategy is
not necessarily the best for their political constituents.
However, the
most dangerous implication of the growth obsession is that it may create a
society that is excluded from our economic activities. A potentially
destructive time bomb through diminishing social cohesion. This may
escalate our existing problems of inequality, identity politics
and intolerance.
Let us stop
this obsession with growth.
Arief
Anshory Yusuf is a professor of economics at Padjadjaran University in Bandung
and president of the Indonesian Regional Science Association (IRSA)
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