Measuring Up America
The Social Science Research Council and Columbia University Press have published a remarkable and eye-opening book, called The Measure of America: American Human Development Report 2008-2009.
The book is modeled on the annual Human Development Report
published since 1990 by the United Nations Development Programme. That series attempted to get away from the
raw economic indicator of Gross Domestic Product, and to determine the level of
human development in each country. The
"human development index" used by UNDP, an alternative to GDP, was "a composite index measuring average
achievement in the three basic dimensions of human development--a long and
healthy life, knowledge, and a decent standard of living." (From the Human Development Report 2006).
The Nobel Prize winning economist Amartya Sen was
instrumental in developing the Human Development Report, and wrote the Foreword
to The Measure of America. There, he
writes that "we have to judge the success of a society, including its economy,
not just in terms of national wealth or the ubiquitous GNP, but in terms of the
freedoms and capabilities that people enjoy to live as they would value
living." Sen observes that this
approach has been "remarkably neglected in the
The book itself assembles data in clearly presented tables
on the three main "building blocks" of the human development index: a long and healthy life; access to knowledge;
and a decent standard of living. In all
three areas, the
The data shows the downward trend for the
These are all trends and themes presented in The End of the American
Century, where I employ many of the same
measures used in The Measure of America.
They point out how far the
(For the full version of this post, see The End of the American Century








