After the Great Depression, the GDP was used to take the stock market's temperature. But over the years, it increasingly became a measure of how well society was doing, "and those are two very different things," noted Stiglitz. In fact, he also counsels market participants to avoid using the stock market as a measure of economic health, especially now in the midst of the downturn. "The stock market is a very bad measure of how the overall economy is doing," he explained.
For one thing, said Stiglitz, the stock market could be bolstered by falling wages. Consider the current situation: it is likely that the true U.S. unemployment rate is much higher than the official 9.7%, putting extra downward pressure on wages. Sinking wages can boost short-term profitability for individual companies but ultimately diminish aggregate demand, stifling a strong economic recovery.
Today's stock market prices also may appear high because the Fed is keeping interest rates low, realizing that the economy is not yet in a robust recovery. Low interest is a natural deterrent for investors looking for a decent return. "Would you rather get zero on your bank deposits or put your money in the stock market — even with the risk?" Stiglitz asked the crowd.





Reader CommentsDisplaying 3 of 8
Pete Speer
Oct 28, 2009 6:58 PM ET
GDP Measures Yesterday's Economy
The U.S. Economy has shifted considerably. The GDP measurement has not shifted. The key element in the prior century … more
Gico Dayanghirang
Oct 15, 2009 10:51 PM ET
Culture of Greed
From it's idealistic beginnings as a free nation after a revolution from colonial oppression, America has since been … more
michael redman
Oct 2, 2009 5:02 PM ET
along the same lines of argument...
gdp also fails to measure what future benefit a given dollar of production will create, or fail to create. as far as … more
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