@McTraveller
Uh... GDP isn't related to taxation, other than taxes are I think included in the government spending component.
GDP = Gross Domestic Product, it's a measure that is intended to represent the economic activity of a large entity like a country. I can't remember the formula off the top of my head, but I'm sure the internet can help you there: The one I remember I think is consumption plus government spending plus investment plus net exports.
Yeah ok so I looked, Wiki says it's "a measure of the market value of all goods and services produced within a time period." So I guess it should theoretically include mowing your own lawn, since that is a service...?
With much humor intended, I would ask you, "Is there any system of wealth measurement that doesn't attract the attention of those in the business of taking or taxing?"
The reason I said, "GDP is an estimate of value for the purpose of negotiating transactions and taxation on those transactions" is, it doesn't matter what the original incarnations of the GDP system were created for because the GDP measurement is now used by governments when negotiating transactions with other governments (trade agreements, aid offerings, access to resources, military assistance, etc), it is used by politicians for promoting themselves, and it is used by persons advocating lower tax rates on the poor, it is used by those lobbying for domestic industries, and all of these political influences are certainly involved in attempts to adjust the GDP numbers to benefit their causes.
If you are lobbying for the USA steel industries, you will hold up the inflated-as-possible value (the % of GDP that the steel industry could create) and say, "we need to tax steel imports to protect this % of the USA GDP.People talk about adding unpaid labor to the GDP, but because unpaid labor rarely results in something that can be stolen or taxed, it will never really happen. "It is very nice that you take care of your kids, but we can't determine how to tax that...". The things that can be taken or taxed will always be measured separately by those that are in the business of taking or taxing.
Any discussion about the value of your own unpaid labor needs to be put in the context of "tax as a substitute for banditry" or it will fail when the goons with guns are introduced.
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So how do you measure the value of that which cannot be stolen but can be destroyed?
I greatly enjoyed your post on inalienable property.
Well, I did too, but maybe for different reasons :p
If I take the time to build a sand castle at low tide, why should anyone have a right come up to me and threaten to remove my enjoyment of watching the ocean take it away from me? The horrifying thing is that, that sandcastle example is an analogy that can be applied to people who watch their children suffer ruin by the influence and actions of others rather than watch their children become free adults. In some ways, figurative "inalienable property" is exactly at the core of "the right to take emo-pets on planes" and other "emo-rights" like the right "to have a public statue of some historic dude who was also a slave-owner or to remove that statue". Because the figurative or literal applications of words can blur, maybe I don't fully understand which "inalienable property" you meant, but if you are suggesting that I meant "inalienable property" referred to in
Gambone's reply to this question, that is not what I meant. I only meant that the effort of mowing a lawn resulted in nothing that could be taken or taxed, only destroyed. Mowing a lawn is as much an artistic expression as a functionally useful act. If it has been a high grass lawn and that grass was cut and gathered for livestock, then that grass is something that could be taken or taxed... that is where I was going with that. Taxmen, whether holding weapons or briefcases, want something tangible to take, and while GDP does include "services" that are not tangible, the payment for those services is tangible, which is why "paid baby-sitting" is part of GDP and "unpaid baby-sitting" is not.