Who says that you can't rewrite
history? The recent announcement by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) announcing the results of the 14th comprehensive analysis of the
National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA), also known as the nation's GDP by
the sweaty masses, is the BEA's way of rewriting the past, all the way back to
1929 when most of our great grandparents or grandparents were suffering through
the worst economic contraction in recent economic history.
Every five years or thereabouts, the
BEA examines the source data behind the U.S. GDP data and revises what goes
into calculating the size of the American economy and the level of economic
growth. Once these calculation changes are adopted, to maintain some
semblance of consistency, the changes are applied all the way back to 1929.
Let's open by looking at how GDP is
calculated.
GDP = gross investment + government
spending + private consumption
Note that government spending is net of imports. By increasing the influence of any one of these factors, GDP will rise, showing the importance of the BEA's revision process.
This time, there are four main
conceptual changes:
1.) Research and Development is now
capitalized.
2.) Entertainment, literary and
artistic originals are now capitalized.
3.) Residential housing ownership
transfer costs are capitalized on an expanded basis.
4.) The accrual treatment of defined
benefit pension plans has changed.
In addition, major "table"
changes were made to reflect:
1.) Intellectual property products.
2.) New pension tables.
While a discussion of most of these changes would be enough to induce involuntary sleeping among the non-accounting people among us, there is one key change that is rather surprising; the inclusion of the capitalization of entertainment, literary and artistic originals and intellectual property products. By affecting these changes, the BEA
is increasing the size of the gross investment number with the new inclusion of
research and development spending, art, music, film royalties, books and theatre.
The United States is way ahead of the curve on this one, being the first
in the world to adopt such a wide range of "investment" items.
Unfortunately, it means that we can no longer compare apples to apples
when comparing U.S. economic growth rates to those of the rest of the world. That's a topic for another posting.
First, let's look at how much these changes to the
calculation of GDP has actually affected GDP growth rates back to 1929:
Naturally, the changes have less
impact the further back that we go, however, over the past five years (between
2007 and 2012), the impact is noticeable. Average annual economic growth,
although very, very tepid compared to the past 80 years, moves up from 0.6
percent under the old schema to 0.8 percent, an increase of 33.3 percent.
It also pushes up the annual economic contraction rate between the fourth
quarter of 2007 and the second quarter of 2009 from -3.2 percent to -2.9
percent. See, that bad old Great Recession was nowhere nearly as bad as
we all thought!
The biggest positive impact of the
new GDP calculation was in 2012 as shown on this bar graph noting that the dark blue bar shows the total impact of the changes and the other bars show the impact of each factor on the total:
The new and improved GDP for 2012
rose by 2.8 percent rather than the even more pitiful 2.2 percent previously
touted by the BEA. The biggest improvement of all was seen in the first
quarter of 2012 as shown on this bar graph:
For that quarter alone, the newly
minted GDP growth rate of 3.7 percent was nearly twice the old rate of 2.0
percent. By any measure, that's a robust period of economic growth,
similar to what was experienced, on average, between 1929 and the Great
Recession as you noted on the first graphic.
What does all of this mean?
GDP for 2012 is now $16.2445 trillion, up from $14.4179 trillion
in 2009 and $14.4803 in 2007. For 2012 alone, the upward revision was
$559.8 billion when compared to the bad, old way of doing things. This
also has an additional unintended consequence; the U.S. debt-to-GDP level now
looks somewhat less frightening than it did before. With the debt
including both debt held by the public and intragovernmental debt sitting at
$16.433 trillion on December 31, 2012, the new and improved GDP numbers give us
a debt-to-GDP ratio of "only" 101 percent. Under the old
scheme, the debt-to-GDP was a completely unacceptable 104.8 percent.
Sadly, all of that is academic now since the debt has long passed the level
seen back at the end of 2012.
While I understand that the
methodology behind the GDP calculation has to change to reflect changes in
technology and other key parts of the economy, the apparent newfound,
relatively robust, growth in the economy since the end of the Great
Recession is little more than smoke and mirrors. In addition, looking
back at the historical record, we can see that the level of economic growth in
this cycle is still pathetic no matter what accounting magic is used by the BEA to make it look better.
Very informative, thank you. I would like to share part of my recent post that questions the quality of recent economic growth and hope it adds to the discussion.
ReplyDeleteRecently the government muddied the water further on defining growth when they made a minor change in how the GDP is calculated, this will have the effect of making things appear better and giving the impression of even more growth, it will also improve the GDP / national debt ratio thus making our debt seem less dramatic. If government was interested in a more honest reflection on economic growth they could back bankruptcies out of the GDP as lost assets, fact is many debts are not getting paid down or off but simply being written off. In a recent post I wrote about how new business start-ups propel the economy forward when created but often leave a wake of destruction behind when they fail after a short time.
The remainder of my post is available at; http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/08/the-wrong-kind-of-growth.html