Flaw in US Data Overstates Growth, Productivity

Neubarth

At the Ballpark July 30th
Nov 8, 2008
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I Have Been Speaking To This Issue For Years Now!

Flaw in US Data Overstates Growth, Productivity


Amazing MSM (especially MSNBC) is drawing attention to the fantasy land the gov't is living in


A widening gap between data and reality is distorting the government’s picture of the country’s economic health, overstating growth and productivity in ways that could affect the political debate on issues like trade, wages and job creation.

The shortcomings of the data-gathering system came through loud and clear here Friday and Saturday at a first-of-its-kind gathering of economists from academia and government determined to come up with a more accurate statistical picture.

The fundamental shortcoming is in the way imports are accounted for. A carburetor bought for $50 in China as a component of an American-made car, for example, more often than not shows up in the statistics as if it were the American-made version valued at, say, $100. The failure to distinguish adequately between what is made in America and what is made abroad falsely inflates the gross domestic product, which sums up all value added within the country.

American workers lose their jobs when carburetors they once made are imported instead. The federal data notices the decline in employment but fails to revalue the carburetors or even pinpoint that they are foreign-made. Because it seems as if $100 carburetors are being produced but fewer workers are needed to do so, productivity falsely rises — in the national statistics

“We don’t have the data collection structure to capture what is happening in a real time way, or what is being traded and how it is affecting workers,” said Susan Houseman, a senior economist at the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research in Kalamazoo, Mich., who has done pioneering research in the field. “We have no idea how to measure the occupations being offshored or what is being inshored.”

(the rest of the story) Flaw in US Data Overstates Growth, Productivity - General * US * News * Story - CNBC.com

I could go on and on about government data on the employment situation, but you know where I stand on their totally bogus numbers.
 
Would it be accurate to say that government accountants and statisticians are full of crappola?
 

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