Monthly Archives: August 2006

Environmental politics

GDP as ‘fairytale’

To a new book club last night, where the topic of discussion was
Capitalism: As If the World Matters, by Jonathon Porritt.

It is an attempt, we concluded, to reframe “green” thought going back to the seventies into a form and vocabulary with which economists and businesspeople might be comfortable.

In the discussion I managed to make some economists very uncomfortable (sorry!) by suggesting that GDP was a “fiction”, which another commentator later modified to “fairytale”. That might sound a bit extreme, but the point I was making is that it has as a measure no absolute value – it is just a collection of figures that everyone has agreed means something. (A bit like money.) Of course the obvious feminist example of this is that it doesn’t count unpaid (but clearly valuable) outputs of labour such as caring and housework.

We were discussing the difficulties of creating/agreeing a “green GDP measure”. My view on this is select a few sensible figures, produce a formula to plug them into and push it hard; don’t try to get a “perfect”, exactly balanced measure, because such a thing doesn’t exist.

Carnival of Feminists

Break out the streamers…

… for it is carnival time. Now up on Super Babymama, the Carnival of Feminists No 20.

And it is a spectacular, if often shocking show: posts from the carnage in the Middle East (both Lebanon and Iraq), and a focus on the effects of poverty – I was particularly taken by a post by cat(s)wymming about how living the grad student life is for her a relief from poverty (when others regard it as such).

But don’t waste time here – go over there and check out the full spread. And do please help to spread the word!

Miscellaneous

Marketing genius

The National Australia Bank has acquired, no doubt after considerable payments to markting consultants, a new logo: nab.

From the online dictionary:

nab
tr.v. Informal nabbed, nab·bing, nabs
1. To seize (a fugitive or wrongdoer); arrest.
2. To grab; snatch.

Pure marketing genius that.
(Hat-tip to the New Internationalist)