To move beyond GDP, don’t ignore ecological economics
Sustainable development will only be achieved when governments base decisions on human skills and natural resources, not just gross domestic product. ‘Beyond GDP’ approaches must take natural capital and planetary health into account.Credit: Matjaz Corel/Alamy
The world seems ready to move beyond gross domestic product (GDP), a measure of economic growth, and towards metrics that are more representative of sustainability and people’s well-being. United Nation member states ratified this move in 2024, and the World Bank concurs.
A UN group, tasked last year with recommending how this transition should work, released a draft of its interim report in November last year. A final report is expected on 7 May. The proposed framework has drawn strong reactions from many experts in beyond-GDP metrics, few of whom were part of the group. In short, the report is vastly complicated and untethered from the substantial body of work that has been gathered over many decades in this field.
The framework for the transition aims to cover all bases of well-being — including health, education and ‘subjective well-being’. It rests on three foundations (peace, respect for the planet and human rights). But it fails to recognize the core dependence of human needs on nature. And because it isn’t firmly grounded in economic and ecological sciences, the proposal lacks robustness and credibility.
Without solid backing from environmental economists, the UN will struggle to provide an authoritative pathway to move governments beyond GDP.
- Pushpam Kumar
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Volume 653 Issue 8114, 14 May 2026