A highly topical look at the formula that dominates global economies,
and why it has outlived its usefulness. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
is the world's economic health-check, an influential ranking of global
prosperity. A rising number is manna for markets and keeps business
buzzing; a falling one is a portent of doom for everyone. But, as
science writer Ehsan Masood deftly shows in this second edition of
GDP, that the measure can be unforgiving for those countries that
cannot be - or choose not to be - outlined by its rules. And it fails to
outline much of what is really important to our lives. GDP was created
to help Western economies rebuild after the horrors of the Great
Depression and to rise again from the fires of the Second World War. But
it simultaneously rewarded decades of environmental destruction, and
now, amid an unprecedented economic crisis after a global pandemic, it
faces a fight for its survival. What began as a useful formula to assess
a country's path to prosperity, has trapped societies and leaders into a
system of measurement from which the world has to break free. We must,
and this book shows how we can.