For decades, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been treated as the primary benchmark for national progress. When GDP rises, it is widely interpreted as a sign that societies are improving economically. Yet in many contexts, this growth narrative increasingly contrasts with lived experience: while economic output expands, public trust declines, inequality persists, and overall life satisfaction stagnates or even falls.
This growing disconnect raises a fundamental question: if GDP is going up but people do not feel better off, what exactly are we measuring—and what are we missing?
The Limits of GDP as a Measure of Progress
GDP is, in simple terms, the total monetary value of goods and services produced within a country. Because of its simplicity and comparability, it has become the dominant indicator used by governments, media, and international institutions to assess economic performance.
However, economists and policymakers have long recognized that GDP is an incomplete measure of societal well-being. It does not capture many critical dimensions of human life, including:
- Unpaid care work, such as childcare or supporting family members
- Inequality in income and wealth distribution
- Environmental degradation and pollution costs
- Resource depletion and long-term ecological damage
- Social cohesion, mental health, and community well-being
As a result, GDP growth can increase even when large segments of the population experience stagnation, insecurity, or declining quality of life. This creates a structural blind spot in policymaking, where what is measured does not necessarily reflect what matters most to people.

When Economic Growth and Well-Being Diverge
The central tension in the GDP debate is the growing gap between economic indicators and public perception of progress. While economies may expand, many people report increasing dissatisfaction with political and economic systems.
This divergence suggests that GDP, when used as the primary policy compass, may distort priorities. Governments may pursue policies that maximize economic output while neglecting issues such as:
- Affordable housing
- Healthcare accessibility
- Job quality and security
- Environmental sustainability
- Social inequality and exclusion
In this context, growth becomes disconnected from well-being, and higher GDP does not automatically translate into better lives.
The Global Push Beyond GDP
Recognizing these limitations, international institutions have increasingly called for alternative frameworks to measure progress more holistically. A major development in this direction is the work led by the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres through the High-Level Expert Group on “Beyond GDP.”
The group’s report, Counting What Counts, argues for a broader “compass” to guide policymaking—one that reflects not only economic output but also human and planetary well-being.
Rather than replacing GDP entirely, the approach proposes complementing it with a set of indicators that better capture real-world outcomes.
A New Framework for Measuring Progress
The proposed Beyond GDP framework organizes progress into four key pillars:
- Foundational principles, including peace, human rights, and environmental sustainability
- Current well-being, covering health, education, and quality of life
- Equity and inclusion, addressing inequality and distributional justice
- Sustainability and resilience, focusing on long-term ecological and social stability
Together, these dimensions aim to provide a more complete picture of how societies are functioning, beyond purely economic performance.
The idea is not to abandon GDP, but to prevent it from being the sole or dominant measure shaping national priorities.
From Single Indicators to Progress Dashboards
One of the key recommendations of the Beyond GDP initiative is the development of national “progress dashboards.” These dashboards would bring together multiple indicators into a coherent system that policymakers and the public can use to track societal well-being.
Rather than ranking countries based on a single number, these dashboards would allow governments to monitor trade-offs and balance competing priorities more effectively.
In addition, a global reporting mechanism aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has been proposed, aiming to strengthen accountability and encourage more consistent measurement of progress across countries.
Why This Shift Matters Now
The call to move beyond GDP is gaining urgency in the context of rapid global change. Emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence, for example, have the potential to significantly increase productivity and economic output. However, they may also disrupt labor markets, deepen inequality, and reshape social systems in ways that GDP alone cannot capture.
Similarly, environmental crises, demographic shifts, and rising inequality highlight the limitations of growth-centric policy models. A system that measures success only through economic expansion risks overlooking long-term risks to both people and the planet.
Toward a More Complete Definition of Progress
The central argument behind the Beyond GDP movement is not that economic growth is irrelevant, but that it is insufficient. A more accurate understanding of progress must reflect the full complexity of human well-being, including social, environmental, and distributive dimensions.
This requires shifting from a single metric to a broader system of measurement—one that better aligns policy with what people actually value in their lives.
As this debate evolves, the challenge for governments, institutions, and societies is not only to measure differently, but to act differently based on what those measurements reveal.
In this sense, the question is no longer whether GDP should be replaced, but whether it should continue to dominate how progress is defined at all.