Evaluating National Economic Health
A coastal nation with no prior significant fishing industry discovers a large, previously untapped population of a valuable fish species in its territorial waters. Over five years, an aggressive fishing campaign leads to massive exports, causing the nation's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to double. A government official cites the doubling of GDP as definitive proof of a successful and sustainable economic strategy. Based on principles of national wealth accounting, critically evaluate the official's conclusion. Is the doubling of GDP, in this context, a reliable indicator of a long-term improvement in the nation's economic well-being? Justify your reasoning.
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CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Evaluating National Economic Health
Analyzing National Economic Reporting
The island nation of Oakhaven reports a record-breaking year for its main economic indicator, driven entirely by a massive increase in the harvesting of its ancient, slow-growing hardwood forests. An economic analyst warns that this reported economic success is deceptive. Based on this scenario, what is the most significant flaw in the standard method used to calculate Oakhaven's economic performance?
Standard Gross Domestic Product (GDP) calculations accurately reflect a nation's sustainable economic well-being because they treat the depletion of natural capital (e.g., forests, fish stocks) the same way they treat the depreciation of man-made capital (e.g., machinery).
Critique of an Economic Indicator
A country's primary economic performance metric is based on the total market value of all final goods and services produced. Match each of the following economic activities with the most accurate assessment of how this standard metric would reflect the activity's true contribution to the nation's long-term economic well-being.
Evaluating Long-Term Economic Strategy
Analyzing Competing Economic Reports
A government is proposing a 10-year economic plan focused on rapidly extracting and selling its nation's large, non-renewable mineral deposits. The stated goal is to maximize the growth of the country's primary economic output metric to fund new infrastructure. Which of the following statements offers the most fundamental critique of this strategy from the perspective of long-term national wealth accounting?
The nation of Atlantica, whose economy is based on fishing, reports a 10% increase in national income after its fleets begin harvesting a newly discovered, large stock of deep-water fish. In the same year, the nation of Veridia, whose economy is based on forestry, reports a similar 10% income growth after clearing a significant portion of its ancient, previously untouched forests for timber. An economist claims that the methods used to calculate the national income for both nations share the same fundamental flaw. What is this shared flaw?