Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico
Transcription
Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico
Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico • Jose Israel Alameda-Lozada, Ph.D. Ivonne del C. Diaz-Rodriguez, Ph.D. Department of Economics at the University of Puerto Rico, Recinto Universitario de Mayaguez INDEX OF SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC WELFARE OF PUERTO RICO Jose Israel Alameda-Lozada, P.H.D & Ivonne del C. Dlaz-Rodrlguez, P.H.D; Department of Economics at the University of Puerto Rico, Recinto Universitario de MayagUez h TABLE OF CONTENT Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico II RECONOCIMIENTO PROLOGO (JUAN ROSARIO, MISION INDUSTRIAL) RESUMEN EJECUTIVO IX - XIII EXECUTIVE SUMMARY XIV - XVIII I. III - VIII Introduction A. A.1. B. 4 Conventional Measure of Economic Growth National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) and the Gross 6 Domestic Product (GOP) Alternative Measures of Economic Welfare B. 1 B.2 B.3 6 Measure of Economic Welfare (MEW) 7 The Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) The Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) 7 8 C. The Max-Neef Threshold Hypothesis of Welfare versus Economic Growth 9 D. The ISEW and the Pursuit of Sustainable Development 11 E. The Needs of ISEW Accounts for Puerto Rico 12 II. Building the ISEW Accounts for the economy of Puerto Rico 14 A. Consumer Expenditure and Income Inequality Adjustment (Columns B and C) 15 B. Services from Domestic Labor (Column E) 16 C. Services from Consumer Durables (Col. F) 19 D. Difference (Col I - Col F) between Expenditures and the Value of Services from Consumer Durables (Col. I) 22 E. Services from Streets and Highways (Col. G) F. Public Expenditures on Health and Education (Col. H) 22 25 G. Defensive Private Expenditures on Health and Education (Col. J) 29 H. Cost of Commuting (Col K) 29 I. Cost of Pollution Control (Col. L) 36 J. Cost of Automobile Accidents (Col. M) 36 K. Cost of Water Pollution (Col. N) 40 L. Cost of Air Pollution (Col. 0) 40 M. Cost of Noise Pollution (Col. P) 40 N. Cost of Wetland Losses (Col. Q) 42 O. Depletion of Non- Renewable Resources (Col. S) P. Carbon Dioxide Emissions Damage (Col. T) 49 Q. Cost of Ozone Depletion (Col. T) 49 R. The Cost of Crime 51 R.1 R.2 R.3. Victim Losses 55 R. 1.a Domestic Dispute 56 Public and Private Costs of Justice 46 57 Private Defensive Expenditures of Crime losses, Prevention/Detection. 58 R.3.a Retail losses due to fraud, theft and shoplifting 58 R.3.b. Home and Business Expenditures in Security Systems 59 R.3.c. Private 60 Security Guards and Private Investigators R.3.d. Burglary and Theft: premiums and losses paid RA. Offense to Society R.5 L 60 RA.a. Drug trade and trafficking 60 RA.b. Illegal Gaming 62 RA.c. Illegal Selling ("Piracy"). Total Cost of Crime 60 of New Technological 62 63 Products III. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) References 65 71-74 Appendix A: Graphs ISEW and GOP: International Comparison 75-82 Appendix B: Table B-1-- Total Cost of Crime at 2000 prices: Fiscal Year 1970 to 2006 83-84 -.1 The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement of national income as defined by the GDP... goals for 'more' growth should specify of what and for what. Simon Kuznets, creator of GDP, 1962 The gross national product does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our wit nor our courage; neither our wisdom nor our learning; neither our compassion nor our devotion to our country; it measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile. Robert F. Kennedy, 1968 Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts, can be counted. Albert Einstein Too many people today know the price of everything and the value of nothing. Ann Landers _ ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors recognize the valuable contribution of Alfredo Gonzalez Martinez, Wilfredo Ruiz Oliveras and Roopchand Ramgolam, retired professors from the Economics Department at the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez. They would like also to acknowledge Beatriz Rivera and Nelly Ramos Vazquez, due to worthy grammatical and styling advises. A special recognition goes to Juan Rosario from Misi6n Industrial, because he planted the first seed of this methodological approach. To all of them, go our "Gracias". RECONOCIMIENTOS Los autores reconocen las valiosas aportaciones de Alfredo Gonzalez Martinez, Wilfredo Ruiz Oliveras y Roopchand Ramgolam, profesores retirados del Departamento de Economia del Recinto Universitario de MayagUez de la Universidad de Puerto Rico. Igualmente reconocen las consideraciones gramaticales y de estilo de las senoras Beatriz Rivera y Nelly Ramos Vazquez. El reconocimiento intelectual y especial, a Juan Rosario, luchador ambiental de Misi6n Industrial, quien brind6 la primera semilla de este enfoque metodol6gico. A todos ellos nuestras mas expresivas muestras de agradecimiento. 11 PROLOGO EL GOBIERNO DEL BRUTO A Puerto Rico lo gobierna un Bruto, que no tiene la sensibilidad que hace falta para distinguir entre el bien y el mal. A Puerto Rico lo gobierna un ente que confunde lo que produce beneficios para el pais con lo que le hace dana al pais. Por ello las decisiones que impulsa son cada vez mas resentidas por la mayorfa de los puertorriquenos, que son los que en ultima instancia tienen que sufrir, de la manera mas descarnada, los efectos de esas decisiones. No obstante, la mayorfa de los ciudadanos, incluyendo los que sufren en carne propia los desmanes del mismo, continuan apoyando a ese Bruto. Las razones para ese apoyo son multiples. Para comenzar, la mayorfa de la poblacion ni siquiera reconoce que hay una relacion entre sus males y el gobierno del Bruto. Y es que este Bruto tiene demasiada gente que le da su respaldo, sobre todo algunas personas que por su preparacion profesional deberfan saber mas que nosotros, ciudadanos comunes, sobre las capacidades de este ser. Entre los hombres de negocio, los industriales, los comerciantes, en fin "las fuerzas vivas" del pais, el Bruto tiene un respaldo amplio. Donde esta insensible criatura goza del mayor respaldo es en los sectores financieros: los banqueros, las casas de corretaje, los inversionistas, los analistas y sobre todo los economistas. Entre estos ultimos el respaldo al Bruto, no solamente es unanime, sino visceral. Nadie perteneciente a esta clase profesional osarfa cuestionar siquiera las bondades de nuestro gobernante. Si no lo cree, escuche las noticias en la radio, vea los reportajes de los estados de situacion del pais en la television periodicos, 0 en los especialmente en las secciones de negocios, y vera que nadie, absolutamente nadie que haya sido bautizado en las aguas bautismales del altar de la economia, se atreve a cuestionar la supremada del Bruto so pena de ser excomulgado. Escuchen con cuidado porque esa unanimidad parece resquebrajarse. Desde el oeste de Puerto Rico -tenia que ser lejos de la capital- dos economistas le han salido al paso al gobierno absoluto del Bruto. iii L Nunca en Puerto Rico, que tengamos conocimiento, ningun iniciado en las ocultas artes de la economia se habia atrevido a cuestionar el gobierno del Bruto. Ahora no es uno sino dos, y lo hacen con el rigor que requiere la tarea de examinar con seriedad una verdad que, no solamente no se discute en nuestro pais, sino que pertenece al reino de las verdades absolutas y evidentes que, por axiomaticas, no pueden ser cuestionadas. El Dr. Jose I. Alameda-Lozada y la Ora. Ivonne del C. OiazRodriguez, economistas y profesores del Recinto Universitario de Mayagiiez, comienzan a ponerle el cascabel al gato de uno de los entes mas poderosos del gobierno de Puerto Rico. No nos referimos al gobernador de turno. El Dr. Alameda y la Ora. Rodriguez no tienen tiempo para lo inmediato, lo coyuntural. Se han dirigido a lo sistemico, a lo esencial. Han comenzado a desmitificar uno de los instrumentos mas sacrosantos de la economia no solo en Puerto Rico, sino en todo el planeta. Nos referimos al Producto Nacional Bruto (PNB). Oesde que se comenzo a crear, a partir de los trabajos del economista Simon Kuznets despues de la depresion de los alios 30, principalmente como instrumento de las potiticas economicas Keynesianas adoptadas por el gobierno de Roosevelt antes, durante y despues de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, el PNB se convirtio en los Estados Unidos en el indicador por excelencia para medir la salud de la economia. Su uso se generalizo despues de la guerra a practicamente todos los paises del mundo. No deberia extraliarnos que el mundo entero adoptara el PNB como el indicador economico principal. Esto es una consecuencia logica de la exportacion del modelo economico norteamericano al resto de los paises del mundo. Las bases de ese modelo fueron establecidas claramente por el presidente Truman en su discurso inaugural el 20 de enero de 1949. Segun Truman, la meta de todos los paises del mundo tenia que ser la del desarrollo economico. Asi, de golpe y porrazo, toda la diversidad y riqueza historica, cultural y material del 95% de los ciudadanos del mundo quedo reducida, parafraseando a Wolfgang Sachs, investigador del desarrollo del Instituto Wuppertal en Alemania, a una simple, inflexible y homogeneizante categoria: los subdesarrollados. La carrera se dirigia al desarrollo, hacia el lugar en donde ya estaban algunos paises privilegiados que, por haber conseguido hacer crecer su produccion hasta ciertos umbrales, se habia separado del resto de los mortales. IV El PNB era, pues, el indieador perfecto para medir desarrollo porque, siendo una medida del agregado de la produccion de bienes y servicios, podia usarse para medir el crecimiento de esta y por ende de la economia. El crecimiento economico era la medida del desarrollo y este era necesario para sacar a los paises subdesarrollados de los avatares de la pobreza. El silogismo es impecable y su conclusion inevitable: para salir de la pobreza hay que hacer crecer el PNB. Aunque el discurso del presidente Truman marca la era oficial del moderno empuje hacia el desarrollo economico mundial, el concepto ni era nuevo ni su proceso de implantacion comenzo en esos momentos. En julio de 1944, trece meses antes de la rendicion de Japan, 730 delegados del bloque de los aliados se reunieron en Breton Woods, New Hampshire para crear el Fondo Monetario Internacional y el Banco Mundial a fin de regir los procesos financieros necesarios para implantar el modelo economieo una vez concluyera la guerra. Con ella comenzo una nueva carrera hacia el desarrollo economieo basado en el crecimiento de la produccion y por consiguiente del consumo. La carrera por el crecimiento de la economia no solamente no ha cesado, sino que, alimentada por las nuevas reglas impuestas por la globalizacion, se ha intensificado. 5i usamos el producto bruto como la medida de nuestro progreso, no hay duda de que hemos sido muy exitosos. Entre 1950 y el 2000, el producto bruto mundial se multiplieo por 7 ($ del 1996). No obstante, este aumento se ha conseguido a un costa que como los doctores Alameda y Rodriguez demuestran, no se refleja en el PNB. De manera sucinta pero precisa, y citando algunos de las autoridades a nivel mundial sobre el tema, como es el caso del Dr. Herman Daly, ex economista del Banco Mundial, nuestros autores van preparando su caso. El PNB no es un indicador adecuado para medir el bienestar y debe ser sustituido por uno que incluya los costos, especialmente las externalidades, de producir nuestros bienes y servieios. Un nuevo indicador debe ser usado, afirman: "uno que tome en cuenta tanto los efectos positivos como negativos del crecimiento". Esta es una contribucion a la comprension de nuestra realidad economiea que no solamente no debe subestimarse, sino que no debe pasar desapercibida para ningun sector de nuestra sociedad, si es que queremos salir de la crisis en que nos encontramos. v Para los que hemos dedicado nuestras vidas a buscar modelos para conseguir la sostenibilidad de nuestro pais, el PNB, habia ido perdiendo su aura de mandamiento del evangelio economico para irse convirtiendo en un asfixiante dogma que impedia a sus creyentes ver la realidad. Para mi la imagen ha ido deteriorandose como aquel famoso retrato de Dorian Grey, hasta que ha llegado a cubrirse de un aire de perversidad que es cada vez mas irrespirable. Puede sonar fuerte pero, como se le puede llamar a un indicador que le da mas valor a la enfermedad que a la salud; al crimen mas que a la generosidad; a la destruccion de los recursos naturales mas que a su conservacion. iCree que estamos exagerando? Lean ellibro de los doctores Alameda y Rodriguez. En estos momentos, El Yunque no aporta nada a nuestro producto nacional bruto, sus aportaciones, que no se venden y compran en el mercado, no existen para efectos de la economia. Pero si a algun genio se le ocurriera derribarlo y quemarlo para convertirlo en carbon nuestro PNB creceria, por tanto quemar nuestros bosques es bueno para la economia. Asi mismo los dineros que gastamos en medicos, en abogados, en prisiones aumentan nuestro PNB. Asi que, el crimen, el cancer y los divorcios son buenos para la economia. iNo es eso realmente perverso? Lo interesante y preocupante es que esa verdad tan evidente para los que trabajamos la sostenibilidad desde las ciencias naturales donde el entorno fisico y sus leyes establecen limites que tienen que respetarse so pena de que seamos aniquilados, es practicamente imposible de ver por los economistas. Aqui reside la mas grande contribucion de estos dos distinguidos economistas, haberse atrevido a examinar y cuestionar lo que hasta ahora ha sido incuestionable en su profesion. No conozco a la Ora. Rodriguez pero conozco y he trabajado con el Dr. Alameda. La primera vez que hablamos con sobre el asunto del crecimiento economico y el PNB fue hace varios aiios en Carolina durante la asamblea anual de la Sociedad de Planificacion de Puerto Rico. En aquella ocasion cuatro distinguidos economistas y un sociologo presentaban sus analisis y propuestas para salir de la crisis economica de entonces. Alli cuestionamos las recetas de los cuatro economistas que estaban todas predicadas sobre el consabido crecimiento de la economia. No solamente el Dr. Alameda coincidia con sus colegas, sino que su respuesta a nuestro cuestionamiento fue la mas severa. Hace muy poco nos confeso que penso que era una locura lo que le estabamos planteando. Despues de eso coincidimos en varias VI ocasiones y volvimos a hablar del tema varias veces, en esas ocasiones sin la presion que supone hablar en publico. Finalmente, trabajamos juntos en la crea,cion del Plan de Desarrollo Socioeconomico del Proyecto Enlace del Cano Martin Pena. Alli pudimos por primera vez hablar con calma, pero sobre todo, con mas confianza. La confianza de habernos visto muchas veces, de ver que nuestras posiciones aunque diferentes no eran irracionales, de darnos cuenta de que ambos desde nuestras perspectivas queriamos lo mejor para Puerto Rico. Alli hablamos de Herman Daly y Kenneth Boulding y de los Limites del Crecimiento del Club de Roma. Lo demas es historia. Nuestro pais se encuentra en una de las mas severas crisis de su historia. Esta, distinta a las demas, no es solo nuestra crisis; es la crisis del planeta y no es, como piensan algunos, una crisis coyuntural que vamos a resolver con un parche aqui y otro alla. Esta crisis es sistemica, estructural y requiere reformas trascendentales de tal magnitud que no pueden ser menos que una revolucion. Tenemos que cambiar nuestros paradigmas y eso va a requerir una gran dosis de valentia y de humitdad. Estos dos distinguidos economistas han demostrado que el crecimiento de la economia no puede tomarse como progreso, puesto que el bienestar de los puertorriquenos ha estado deteriorandose mientras el PNB continua creciendo. Esa es una gran contribucion al esclarecimiento de la causa de nuestros problemas. Pero esa no es la mayor contribucion. La mayor contribucion es demostrar que si podemos sentarnos con el otro, el que parece distinto, podemos generar mejores soluciones a nuestros problemas colectivos. Sobre todo, los economistas tienen que abrir las puertas de su casa para que entre el aire fresco de las buenas nuevas de la ecologia. De nuestro lado ha sido muy facit comenzamos a abrirnos a los economistas que han adoptado enfoques mas holisticos, por eso es que leemos a Herman Daly, a Kenneth Boulding, a John Stuart Mill, a Georgecu-Roegen y a otros tantos economistas que han comprendido que la economia se da dentro de una realidad natural que tiene sus propias leyes que se tienen que respetar. Paradojicamente estos son los mismos economistas que no son leidos por sus pares. Ese es probablemente el mayor impedimenta a la solucion de nuestros problemas, la incapacidad de escuchar al otro al que piensa diferente 0 no esta dentro de nuestro circulo de elegidos. Por ello nos llena de esperanza el trabajo del Dr. Jose I. Alameda-Lozada y la Ora. Ivonne del C. Vll L Diaz- Rodriguez, economistas y profesores deL Recinto Universitario de Mayaguez, que han abierto sus oidos y puesto su voz y su inteLigencia aL servicio deL pais. Espero que su trabajo sea eL comienzo de La conversaci6n muLtisectoriaL e interdisciplinaria que todos necesitamos para emprender eL camino hacia eL pais justo, democratico, sostenibLe y feliz que todos queremos. Juan Rosario, Misi6n Industrial San Juan, Puerto Rico, octubre de 2009 Vlll --_',--~---._~-~---.-~~- --,-"-~,,-~,~--------------------- Resumen Ejecutivo fndice de Bienestar Econ6mico Sostenible para Puerto Rico Jose I. Alameda Lozada, Ph.D. & Ivonne Diaz Rodriguez, Ph.D. Los autores, siguiendo la corriente contemporanea de medicion economica, ajustada a consideraciones ecologicas, calculan el Indice de Bienestar Economico Sostenible (IBES) para Puerto Rico, conocido en ingles como Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW). Este indicador surge de una metodologia propuesta para fines de los 1980 por los economistas ecologicos Herman Daly y Clifford Cobb y el mismo es contrario a los indicadores tradicionales encontrados en las Cuentas Nacionales, tales como Producto Interno Bruto 0 Ingreso Nacional. Mediante estos ultimos se puede medir el crecimiento del ingreso pero no necesariamente el nivel de bienestar social, enfoque que se pretende lograr mediante elIBES. r Un informe europeo del 2009, Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress, dirigido por dos premios Nobel de Economia, J. Stiglitz y A. Sen, aborda el problema de la medicion del bienestar economico en los paises. El informe establece que nuevos enfoques en la medicion del bienestar son mundialmente necesarios pues es tiempo de ir por encima del enfoque PIB/PNB. Los autores estiman un tipo de IBES modificado entre el 1970 y 2006, al incluir partidas tales como el costa del crimen, la cual no se considera en ellBES pero si en el enfoque del Indice de Progreso Genuino (GPI) (en ingles Genuine Progress Indicator). Este enfoque puede ser considerado como uno hibrido pues agrega el costa del crimen al estimado, partida que es consistente con el GPI, pero no con elIBES. ix El estudio llega a la conclusion que el nivel de ingreso per capita es superior al estimado del IBES per capita. En segundo lugar, el crecimiento del IBES per capita es diferente al PNB real, en especial durante estos ultimos alios. Por ultimo, auscultando la hipotesis del umbral de Max-Neef entre el crecimiento y el bienestar economico, se concluye que desde el 1983 el IBES per capita ha estado reduciendose pero no asi el PNB per capita. De hecho, el IBES per capita se reduce a un ritmo de 1.7% pero el PNB per capita crece a 1.9%. Desde principios de la decada de los 1970s, los economistas William Norhaus y James Tobin (1972) fueron pioneros en presentar la idea de que la medicion tipica internacional del crecimiento economico 0 desarrollo pasaba por alto los elementos muy esenciales del bienestar socio-economico, incluyendo, la utilizacion de los recursos naturales y la calidad del ambiente. Reclamaban estos la necesidad de desarrollar nuevos esquemas de mediciones fuera del marco de las conocidas Cuentas Nacionales. En alios posteriores, los economistas ecologicos Herman Daly y Clifford Cobb (1989), diseliaron un nuevo modelo de medicion conocido como Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare, en espaliol, indice de Bienestar Economico (IBES). Otros enfoques mas recientes surgen de parte de otros economistas al desarrollar lo que se conoce como Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), nuevamente rebasando la idea de que el producto interne brute no es un indicador de bienestar economico. El IBES parte de que la relacion entre economia y medio ambiente es compleja y adquiere dimensiones multiples que no estan consideradas ni medidas en las Cuentas Nacionales, pero que repercuten en los niveles de bienestar social. EllBES trata medir el bienestar mediante la introduccion de correcciones a los valores de consumo personal-- calculados de acuerdo a los procedimientos convencionales--pero tomando x en cuenta aspectos como la distribucion del ingreso 0 el valor del trabajo domestico, el costa de los recursos naturales; en otros, como la perdida 0 degradacion del capital natural. A manera ilustrativa podemos mencionar eventos 0 aumentar el producto interno (ingreso nacional) de un pais situaciones que pueden 0 region, pero no asi el bienestar economico: (a) Un aumento en el numero de personas encarceladas y en la criminalidad de un pais traen como resultado incrementos en el producto interno bruto, via el gasto del sistema carcelario, y, el gasto en la inversion de las empresas en el control de la criminalidad. Estos no constituyen gastos 0 inversiones que lleven a un mayor bienestar de los residentes; (b) El juieio de ex -futbolista y actor de Hollywood, O.J. Simpson aiiadio $200 millones a la economia de E.U.; pero no signifieD un aumento del bienestar; (c) La explosion de Oklahoma City y la masacre de Littleton generaron un "boom" a la industria de seguros reflejandose en la economia pues a raiz de estos incidentes, se aiiaden unos $40 mil millones adieionales a la seguridad de las escuelas; (d) La industria del juego en E.U. es una de amplio auge montando a mas de $50 mil millones en negocios. (e) Los divorcios en Estados Unidos aiiaden $20 mil millones en negocios y los accidentes de autos unos $57 mil millones, estos influencian el ingreso y el producto pero no aumentan el bienestar; (f) El Calentamiento Global y sus consecuencias aiiaden negocios y ganancias a los sectores productivos, pero eso no signifiea mas bienestar; (g) El problema de salud de obesidad puede aiiadir negocios a la industria de dietas y vigilancia del peso-en E.U. unos $32 mil millones por aiio- Xl lo que se reconoce en el producto bruto como un beneficio, cuando son realmente costos para una sociedad; (h) Las guerras y otros conflictos pueden estimular el crecimiento del producto bruto, pero esto no es sinonimo de un aumento en el bienestar; (i) Un pais puede agotar sus recursos minerales, talar sus bosques, degradar sus suelos, contaminar sus acuiferos y explotar sus recursos , pesqueros hasta la extincion, y esto aumentaria el ingreso, pero no asi el bienestar al haberse afectado estos activos hasta su desaparicion. (j) La contaminadon, el estres del trabajo, los conocidos "tapones" de autos, entre otras desamenidades pueden aumentar el gasto de las empresas, el salario, el consumo de gasolina, etc.; y asi el producto, pero esto no significa un aumento del bienestar. Desde entonces, un grupo de paises, ademas de Estados Unidos 1 han estimado el IBES encontrandose diferencias sustanciales entre el aumento del ingreso (crecimiento economico) y el bienestar economico. Estos estudios muestran que en la mayoria de los paises, ambos indicadores tienden a evolucionar de forma paralela hasta un momento, pero luego comienza a establecerse una brecha sustancial en donde el crecimiento economico aumenta mientras que el bienestar se reduce. Este comportamiento es afin con la hipotesis del umbral (Threshold Hypothesis) de Manfred Max-Neef, la cual establece que r'para cada sociedad que parece estar en un periodo de crecimiento economico, y que puede mejorar sus indicadores de bienestar, puede llegar a un punto critico que mas crecimiento se tenga que realizar a expensas de la calidad de vida, la cual termina deteriorandose". En el caso de Puerto Rico, los autores siguiendo la metodologia de Daly y Cobb, calcularon estimados para un tipo de r'IBES modificado", entre el 1970 y 2006. Este I Entre los paises que se han realizado estudios de IBES son Chile, Austria, Suecia, Alemania, Holanda, Tailandia, China, Reino Unido, Italia y otros de America Latina tales como Bolivia, Argentina, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, entre otros. xu enfoque puede ser considerado como uno hibrido pues agrega el costo del crimen al estimado, partida que es consistente con el GPI, pero no con el IBES. En este estudio se presenta el estimado realizado del IBES modificado per capita (por persona) y se compara con el PNB per capita. Al comparar el comportamiento de ambas, observamos como el nivel de ingreso per capita es superior al estimado del IBES per capita. Por ejemplo, en el 2006, el valor dellBES per capita fue $2,500 mientras que el PNB real per capita montaba a $11 ,500. En segundo lugar, el crecimiento del IBES per capita muestra cambios diferentes al PNB real, en especial durante estos ultimos anos. La tasa de crecimiento anual promedio desde el 1970 al 2006 de IBES per capita es -0.71 % mientras el crecimiento del PNB real es 1.5%. En tercer lugar, se realiza una comparacion entre el crecimiento y el bienestar economico, con el proposito de corroborar si la hipotesis del umbral de Max-Neef se materializa, y al convertir ambos medidores en indices con base de 100 puntos y l' utilizando el ano 1970 como base, se nota que desde el 1983, el IBES per capita ha estado reduciendose pero no asi el PNB per capita. De hecho el IBES per capita se reduce a un ritmo de 1.7% pero el PNB per capita crece a 1.9%. En resumen, la medicion del IBES para Puerto Rico constituye un paso de adelanto para medir si el crecimiento es consono con aumentos en el bienestar de los residentes. En este estudio se concluye que el bienestar economico de los puertorriquenos se ha estado deteriorandose desde principios de los 1980, a pesar de que la medicion de crecimiento economico, aunque menguada, es desde esta fecha positiva. ! t I I Xlll Executive Summary Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico Jose I. Alameda lozada, Ph.D. Ivonne Diaz Rodriguez, Ph.D. The authors, following the contemporary mainstream economic measurement, fit to ecological considerations, calculate the Index of Sustainable and Economic Welfare (ISEW) for Puerto Rico. This indicator arises from a methodology proposed by Herman ecological economists Herman Daly and Clifford Cobb by the end of 1980's and the same is in opposition to the traditional indicators found in the National Accounts, such as ,Gross Internal Product or National Income. By means of these last ones the growth of the income can be measured, but the level of social welfare is not necessarily addressed, approach that is being tried to obtain by means of the ISEW. A recent 2009 European document Report by the Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress--conducted by two Economics Nobel Prizes, J. Stiglitz and A. Sen-- addresses the issue of a proper measure of economic well-being. The report states that new approaches to measure economic welfare are worldwide needed because is time to go beyond GOP/GNP accounts. The authors estimate a type of Modified ISEW between 1970 and 2006, by including entries such as the cost of crime, which is not considered in the ISEW but it is in the approach of the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI). This approach can be considered as a hybrid one because it adds the cost of crime to the estimate, an entry that is consistent with the GPI, but not with the ISEW. The study concludes that the per capita income level is higher than the per capita ISEW. In second place, the growth of the ISEW per capita is different from the real National Gross Product (NGP), especially during these last years. Finally, auscultation XIV of the hypothesis of Max-Neef threshold between the growth and the economic wellbeing, it is concluded that since 1983 the ISEW per capita has been reducing but not so the per capita NGP. In fact, the ISEW per capita is being reduced at a 1.7% rate but the NGP per capita grows at 1.9%. Since early 1970, economists William Norhaus and James Tobin (1972) were pioneering in presenting/displaying the idea that international the typical measurement of the economic growth or development ignored the very essential elements of the socioeconomic well-being, including, the use of the natural resources and the quality of the environment. They claimed the necessity to develop new measurement schemes outside the frame of the known National Accounts. In later years, ecological economists, Herman Daly and Clifford Cobb (1989), designed a new model of measurement known as Index of Sustainable and Economic Welfare. More recent approaches arise from other economists by developing what is known as Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), again exceeding the idea that the internal gross product is not an indicator of economic well-being. The ISEW starts off from the fact that the relation between economy and environment is complex and acquires multiple dimensions that are not considered nor measured in the National Accounts, but that they have a repercussion in the levels of social welfare. The ISEW intends to measure the well-being by means of the introduction of corrections to the values of personal consumption-- calculated according to the conventional procedures--but taking into account aspects like the distribution from the income or the value from the domestic work, the cost of the natural resources; in others, like the loss or degradation of the natural capital. To illustrate we can mention events or situations that can increase the internal product (national income) of a country or region, but not the economic well-being: xv (a) An increase in the number of jailed people and the criminality of a country brings as a result increases in the gross internal product, via the cost of the prison system, and, the cost in the investment of the companies in the control of the criminality. These do not constitute expenses or investments that yield to a greater well-being of the residents; (b) The trial of ex- soccer player and actor of Hollywood, O.J. Simpson added $200 million to the U.S. economy; but it did not mean an increase of the well-being; (c) The explosion of Oklahoma City and the massacre of Littleton generated a r'boom" to the industry of insurances being reflected in the economy as a result of these incidents, added about $40 additional billion to the security of the schools; (d) The industry of the game in United States is one of ample height mounting to more than $50 billion in businesses. (e) The divorces in the United States add $20 billion in businesses and the car accidents about $57 billion; these influence the income and the product but do not increase the well-being; (f) The Global Warming and its consequences add to businesses and gains to the productive sectors, but that does not mean more well-being; (g) The health problem of obesity can add businesses for about $32 billion per year to the industry of diets and monitoring of weigh in U.S, -that is recognized in the gross product as a benefit- when they are really costs for a society; (h) The wars and other conflicts can stimulate the growth of the gross product, but this is not synonymous of an increase in the well-being; (h) A country can exhaust its mineral resources, destroy its forests, degrade its grounds, contaminate its aquifers and exploit its fishing resources until the extinction, and this would increase the income, but not the well-being as these assets were affected to its disappearance. (j) The contamination, the stress of the work, the well-known traffic jams, among other obstacles can increase the cost of the companies, the wage, the consumption of gasoline, etc.; and thus the product, but this does not mean an increase of the well-being. Since then, a group of countries, in addition to the United States ill have estimated the ISEW finding substantial differences between the increase of the income (economic growth) and the economic well-being. These studies show that in most of the countries, both indicators tend to evolve in a parallel form until a point, but XVi soon begin to enact a substantial gap where the economic growth increases whereas the well-being is reduced. This behavior is compatible with the Threshold Hypothesis from Manfred Max-Neef that establish that "for each society that seems to be ;n a period of economic growth, and that can improve its well-being whkh can arrive at a critkal point in which more growth must be made ;n jeopardy of the quaUty of Ufe, which ends up deteriorating itself"· In the case of Puerto Rico, the authors, following the methodology of Daly and Cobb, calculated estimates for a type of "Modified ISEW", between 1970 and 2006. This approach can be considered as one hybrid because it adds the estimated cost of crime, entry that is consistent with the GPI, but not with the ISEW. In this study we compare the modified per capita ISEW with the GNP per capita. We observed how the per capita income level is higher than the estimated per capita ISEW. For example, in the 2006, value of the per capita ISEW was $2,500 whereas the real NGP per capita mounted to $11,500. In second place, the growth of the per capita ISEW shows changes different from the real GNP, in special during the last years. The rate of average annual growth from the 1970 to 2006 of per capita ISEW is -0.71 %while the growth of the real GNP is 1.5%. In third place, a comparison is made between the growth and the economic wellbeing, in order to corroborate if the hypothesis of the threshold of Max-Neef it is materialized. Both measures were converted to indexes with a 100 points base, and using year 1970 as a year base, we noted that the per capita ISEW has been reduced but not so the GNP per capita since 1983. In fact the per capita ISEW is reduced at a 1.7% annual rate but the PNB per capita grows at 1.9%. XVll In summary, the measurement of the ISEW for Puerto Rico constitutes an advanced step to determine if the growth is in line with an income in the well-being of the residents. In this study it is concluded that the economic well-being of the Puerto Ricans has been deteriorating since the beginning of the 1980 decade, the measurement of economic growth, although diminished, has been positive. XVlll Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico Jose Israel Alameda Lozada, Ph.D. I. Ivonne del C. Diaz Rodriguez, Ph.D. Introduction During the last decades, the great transformation of the global economy has dramatically increased the production of goods and services, as well as worldwide standards of living. Countries have searched for a better quality of life through more economic growth, using increases in production as a measure of welfare. More economic growth has been perceived as a signal of a strength and robust economy. However, increases in production and more economic growth do not necessarily translate into a better quality of life or economic welfare. According to the Max-Neef's hypothesis (Max-Neef, 1995), ft ••• for each society that seems to be ;n a period of economic growth, and that can improve its wellbeing which can arrive at a critical point ;n which more growth must be made ;n jeopardy of the quaUty of Ufe, which ends up deteriorating itself". For example, climate change, caused in part by human activities (IPCC, 2007), impose enormous economic, social, and environmental costs (Stern, 2006). According to Stern (2006), increases in temperature could reduce global production between 3% and 20%, and the consumption per capita could be reduced by nearly 20%. Furthermore, rising sea levels could displace nearly 200 millions of people around the world and prompt the extinction of around 40% of animal species. China's economic boom is a relevant example of the effects of increasing GDP on the country's quality of life. After the 1978's economic liberalization reforms, China's GDP has grown an average of 10%, becoming the second largest economy in the world with an annual GDP of over $7 trillion during 2007. Economic reforms have amazingly transformed the Chinese economy, raising the standards of liVing of several hundred million people. However, the quality of life of millions of people is being jeopardized by severe environmental and health problems arising from the country's new economic riches; turning China's new riches into "China's growing pains". Seventy five percent of the country's energy comes from coal, carrying about 19 million tons of sulfur dioxide a year. Consequently, coal burning and industrial activities are generating high levels of air and water pollution. More than 700,000 people die a year due to indoor air pollution; respiratory diseases cause nearly a quarter of all deaths in the countryside; and nearly 700 million people drink water contaminated with human and animal waste, causing liver, stomach, and esophageal cancers. Hence, "China may be getting richer as it turns into the workshop of the world, but as Beijingers rich and poor admit, what good is money if you can't breathe the air?" (Becker, 2004). Likewise, countless events that may increase a country's gross domestic product (GOP), but that do not necessarily translate into a better quality of life, can be mentioned. For example, natural resource exploitation and degradation, air and water pollution, global warming and climate change, workplace and family stress, vehicular and urbanization congestion, obesity, criminality, and wars, among others, generate income and profits for certain economic sectors, but those activities do not constitute an increase in society's welfare or quality of life. In fact, those activities, instead of benefits, are costs from the point of view of the whole society. In spite of that, conventional economic measures, such as GOP, do not consider those costs in their welfare calculation, but the benefits. Consequently, GOP, as a welfare measure is incomplete and inefficient, since it only accounts for the value of goods and services produced and sold within the economy. Therefore, GOP ignores economic, social, and ecological costs that influence welfare and the quality of life. 2 The Max-Neef's hypothesis has been validated in developing and industrialized countries as well, using the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW). This index was originally developed by ecological economists Herman Daly and Clifford Cobb in 1989. The ISEW incorporates sustainability indicators not considered in GOP, such as global warming, depletion of non renewable resources, costs of environmental pollution, costs of congestion, and the costs of urbanization, among others. The results of a modified ISEW model for Puerto Rico do not differ from the international evidence. While GOP per capita has experienced an increasing trend during the last two decades, the quality of life has being rapidly jeopardized. Consequently, more economic growth, after the "critical point", is costly and has negative repercussions in our economic, social, and ecologic welfare. In other , words, economic growth can become "uneconomic", where the costs of growth surpass its benefits. Sustainable development, preached as the new economic paradigm of the XXI century, is just another fashionable term used by politicians and policymakers. In reality, the economic instruments used to measure welfare seriously contradict the sustainable development discourse. After fifty (50) years, a critically inefficient measure of welfare is still in use, leading to erroneous policies, and, in turn, posing increasing social, economic, and environmental costs. As a result, it is important to reevaluate traditional measures of welfare, such as GOP, and to include, not only the benefits of economic growth but also its costs. The ISEW model for Puerto Rico provides a starting point for the development of new economic, social, and environmental strategies. Likewise, it provides the foundation for evaluating if society is moving in the right direction and a tool for measuring true sustainable development; development that embrace and integrate socio-economic aspects with environmental issues. Human needs, actions and 3 ambitions are not isolated to the environment; rather they are connected. If any society is willing to pursue a sustainable development approach, it must refocus its social progress by reducing deprivation and inequalities, and protecting environmental resources. A. Conventional Measure of Economic Growth A.1 National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) and the Gross Domestic Product Following the Great Depression, there was a growing need for understanding the operations of world economies. In 1929, in an attempt to recognize the Depression's economic consequences, the United States Department of Commerce (USDC) hired economist Simon Kuznets, who was an influential theoretician of economic growth, as an adviser to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER). In 1934, following Kuznets' report, the USDC issued the first series of national income statistics by industry of origin and by type of industry (Marcus and Kane, 2007). Gross National or Domestic Product (GNP or GDP) figures--the other side of the national income equation--came later in 1942, basically to answer the questions raised by President F.D. Roosevelt about the social and economic costs of World War II (Economic Mobilization Program). However, the whole economic picture was not completed until 1947 when a double-entry accounting system was published, and then after known as the National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA's). Using this framework, major transactions made by households, business, government, and the rest of the world, were then classified and recorded as a main indicator of aggregate economic activity (Marcus and Kane, 2007). In the United States, GNP statistics were developed during the first half of the twentieth century, as a response to the growing demand for understanding the economic and social implications of World War II--Economic Mobilization Programs. The GDP was created as a measure of the market value of the production of all 4 goods and services within the economy, during a specific interval of time, generally a year. National Accounts can be determined in two ways, Le. the income approach and the expenditure approach. Using the income approach, GDP is determined by totaling the various income shares of the factors of production, while under the expenditure approach the current value of production is determined by totaling all expenditures for final goods and services in the economy (Stewart, 1974). For more than fifty years, countries have pursued well-being and quality of life through more economic growth, as measured by changes in GDP. GDP became the main policy goal and the most widely used welfare measure around the world, including prominent international financial agencies such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. A growth in GDP was seen as a sign of a strong market and therefore a strong economy, and if the market performs well, the society would also benefit (Daly and Cobb, 1989) with improvements in economic welfare. However, this argument appears to be weak since GDP measures only economic welfare, Le., the value of market goods and services produced and consumed within the economy, not total welfare (Daly and Farley, 2004). In 1974, Kenneth Stewart wrote: "A growing GNP ;s generally associated with expanding opportunities for employment and an increasing amount of material welfare. Economic policy facilitating GNP growth ;s formulated, ;n part, as a means of reducing both unemployment and poverty. But a growing GNP has also been accompanied by urban decay and pollution, which are not accounted for ;n national income data. " It is therefore obvious that a great number of factors, Le., psychological, sociological, and ecological, (Daly and Farley, 2004), were not considered by conventional economic measures, but all of them, contributing to the well-being and the quality of life of the society (Jackson and McBride, 2005). This means that increasing economic growth has associated increasing social, economic and environmental costs that reduces total welfare such as increasing inequality, 5 stress, congestion, pollution, pollution-induced health problems, loss ofa host environmental services and the ability of the ecological system to contribute to human welfare. In view of this, several alternative measures of welfare were developed to remedy the measures used to determine GOP. Three of these measures are examined and used in the determination of the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) for Puerto Rico, 1. e., the Measure of Economic Welfare (MEW) by Nordhaus and Tobin (1972), the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW), and the Genuine Progress Index (GPI). B. Alternative Measures of Economic Welfare B. 1 Measure of Economic Welfare (MEW) The study led by Nordhaus and Tobin (1972) was the first answer to the increasing criticism leveled against GNP. Although they did not question the usefulness of GNP as a measure of production, they did question its usefulness in evaluating the growth of economic welfare (Stewart, 1974). "An obvious shortcoming of GNP is that it is an index of production, not consumption. The goal of economic activity, after all, is consumption. Although this is the central premise of economics, the profession has been slow to develop, either conceptually or statistically, a measure of economic performance oriented to consumption, broadly defined and carefully calculated. We have constructed a primitive and experimental 'measure of economic welfare' (MEW), in which we attempt to allow for the more obvious discrepancies between GNP and economic welfare", (Nordhaus and Tobin, 1972) The Nordhaus-Tobin Measure of Economic Welfare (MEW) included three types of adjustments: "reclassification of GNP expenditures as consumption, investment, and intermediate; imputation for the services of consumer capital, for leisure, and for the product of household work; and correction for some of the disamenities of urbanization". Using data between1929-1965, they found a positive correlation between the GNP and the MEW. However, the relation was somewhat deficient since the MEW did not account for environmental costs (Daly and Cobb, 1989). 6 B.2 Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) After Nordhaus and Tobin's findings, economists breathed a sigh of relief, forgot about MEW, and concentrated again on GDP (Daly and Farley, 2004). It was not until 1989, that the ISEW for the United States was published by Herman Daly and John Cobbs (1989). The development of this ISEW was based on the need to incorporate social and ecological indicators that seem to be adversely affected by the growth of GDP. They intended to address sustainability and environmental issues not considered in previous welfare measures (Costanza, et at. 1997). Some of the factors introduced in the ISEW included distributional inequality, where personal consumption is adjusted to account for inequalities in the distribution of income; air, water, and noise pollution data; estimates on costs of the loss of wetlands and farmlands, depletion of nonrenewable resources, commuting, urbanization, auto accidents, advertising, long-term environmental damage, and the cost of ozone depletion. The summarized ISEW formula can be expressed in the following equation: ISEW = Cadj.+ NPE + G + W -DPE -EC -DEC Where Cadj. = consumer s pending adjusted for income inequality NPE = non - defensive public expenditures G = growth in capital and net change in int ernational position W = non - monetarised contributions to welfare DPE = defensive private expenditures = cos ts of environmental deg ratation DEC = depreciation of environmental capital base EC Daly and Cobb (1989) found that GNP per capita and ISEW followed similar trends until the 1970's. However, after the 1970's, the ISEW began to level out and took a declining path. They also found that the positive correlation between 7 GNP and MEW decreased dramatically from 1947 to 1965. Furthermore, Daly and Farley (2004) observed that: "..... if one takes only the latter half of the Nordhaus- Tobin time series (i.e., the 18 years from 1947 to 1965), the positive correlation between GNP and MEW faLLs dramaticaLLy. This suggests that GNP growth at this stage in the U.S. history may be quite an inefficient way of improving economic welfare-certainly less efficient than in the past. " Following Daly and Cobb (1989), many studies, subjected to certain revisions, were conducted to determine the ISEW for many countries and regions around the world, such as the United Kingdom (Jackson 8: Marks, 1994), Austria (Stockhammer et al., 1995), Scotland (Gill 8: Moffat, 1995), Germany (Diefenbacher, 1995), Netherlands (Instituut voor Milieu en Systeemanalyse, 1995), Sweden (Jackson and Styme, 1996), Australia (Hamilton, 1997), Italy (Guenno and Tiezzi, 1998), Chile (Castaneda, 1999), Wales (Mathews et al., 2003); Thailand (Clarke 8: Islam, 2004), Province of Siena, Italy (Pulselli et al., 2006), Thailand (Clark and Islam, 2005) and Belgium (Bleys, 2006). Castaneda (1999) developed ISEW estimates for twelve Latin American countries, including the island of Barbados. B.3 Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) In 1995, the GPI was created, in another attempt to measure economic progress. The GPI is a variant of ISEW and uses the same accounting framework as the GDP. However, the GPI adds household's economic contributions and volunteer work, and subtracts factors such as crime, pollution, and divorce (Talberth, Cobb, and Slattery, 2007). The GPI attempts to measure welfare equivalent income, sustainable income, and net social profit. Welfare equivalent income refers to "psychic income" or welfare associated with consumption. In this case, harmful aspects of consumption are removed by adding or subtracting positive and negative externalities associated with consumption. Sustainable consumption refers to Hicksian income, which is defined as the maximum income the individual can consume during a week, and "still expect to be as well off at the 8 end of the week as he was at the beginning" (Hicks, 1948). Depreciation of manufactured and natural capital and other defensive expenditures against the unwanted effects of economic growth were deducted from GDP. According to Talberth, et al. (2007), net social profit "is a measure of policy effectiveness and an expanded form of cost-benefit analysis that uses sustainable income rather than GDP", thereby providing a "measure of the welfare or sustainability implications of policy changes". The 2006 GPI for the United States included the following variables: personal consumption, an income distribution index, weighted personal consumption, the value of household work and parenting, the value of higher education, the value of volunteer work, services of consumer durables, services of highways and streets, the cost of crime, loss of leisure time, cost of underemployment, cost of consumer durables, cost of commuting, cost of household pollution abatement, cost of automobile accidents, cost of water pollution, cost of air pollution, cost of noise pollution, loss of wetlands, loss of farmlands, loss of primary forests and damage from logging roads, depletion of nonrenewable energy resources, the costs of damage by carbon dioxide emissions and of ozone depletion. In addition to the GPI for the United States, estimated by Talberth et al. 2007 (2007), it was also calculated for Vermont (Costanza, et al. 2004), China (Wen, et al. 2007), and Australia (Hamilton, 1999). C. The Max-Neef Threshold Hypothesis of Welfare versus Economic Growth It has been argued that economic growth is good for the environment, that exists an empirical relation between per capita income and some measures of environmental quality, and that as income goes up there is increasing environmental degradation up to a point, after which environmental quality improves (Arrow, et al. 1995). However, these arguments have been challenged by the Max-Neef's threshold hypothesis. According to Max-Neef (1995), ISEW analyses 9 in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, and the Netherlands showed that economic welfare per capita rises and then began to decline despite continued growth of per capita GNP. Max-Neef (1995) also argued that the threshold hypothesis "may reveal the existence of a point in a country's economic evolution where quantitative development". growth must be metamorphosed into qualitative Accordingly, economic growth does not necessarily improve welfare and lead to a better quality of life. During the last two decades, several studies at the international level found increasing discrepancies between GDP and ISEW per capita (Bleys, 2005). Bleys claims that the difference may be explained by an increasing income inequality, rising costs of resource depletion, and long-term growing environmental costs. Some studies did show that during the 1980's and 1990's, economic welfare leveled off or started to decline in most countries, consistent with the Max-Neef Threshold Hypothesis (Bleys, 2005). Castaneda (1999), using the Daly and Cobb (1989) methodology, developed an ISEW to study the relationship between economic growth and welfare in Chile, and found that between 1965-1995, strong economic growth was mainly due to the export of natural resources. Furthermore, as GDP failed to account for the loss of natural capital and non-marketed services, economic growth increased up to a point, where welfare halted and began to decline, due to severe losses in natural resources. Clarke and Islam (2005) also used an ISEW to study the welfare effects of economic growth in Thailand and found that significant increases in economic growth between 1975 and1999 led in a reduction of absolute poverty and an increasing level of economic welfare. However, it was shown that, at a given point, economic growth resulted in diminishing and negative welfare returns mainly because of the hidden costs associated with more growth. 10 D. The ISEW and the Pursuit of Sustainable Development Sustainable development is defined as the ability of the society to pursue a high level of contemporaneous social progress that ensures generations without the compromising current the needs ability of the of future generations to meet their own needs. Sustainable development must embrace and integrate socio-economic aspects with environmental issues. Human needs, actions and ambitions are not isolated to the environment; rather they are connected. If society is willing to pursue a sustainable development approach, it must refocus its social progress by reducing deprivation and inequalities, and protecting environmental resources. The Index of Sustainable and Economic Welfare (ISEW) is an indicator to properly measure sustainable development, since GDP takes no account of increasing inequality, pollution or damage to people's health and the environment. GOP treats crime, divorce and other elements of social breakdown as economic gains. In effect, several studies, using the ISEW, show that economic growth does not necessarily translates into increased welfare and quality of life. The ISEW was originally designed and estimated, because continued reliance on GOP was often justified by the lack of any concrete alternative and on the belief that there was no a valid way to approximate the value of social and environmental factors in economic terms. This mainstream model of 'progress', that measures economic progress using only GDP, is cheating on all of us and future generations. Progress must be redefined, and GOP must be replaced with new welfare indicators, which measure how our national policies truly deliver a better quality of life for all. 11 E. The Needs of ISEW Accounts for Puerto Rico Since the inception of the Puerto Rico's economic development program, in the 1950's, the economy of Puerto Rico has experienced an incredible success in the socio-economic transformation of the Island. Traditional figures of growth has shown that the real gross domestic product (GOP) per capita soured from $383 in 1950 (1954=100) to $2,841 in 2006. As well, the life expectancy, fertility and death rates, school attendance ratio, and other social indicators of well-being had also reached a significant level of achievement when compared to other counterparts of Latin America and the Caribbean countries. Despite this achievement, there is a general feeling among many local social scientists that the quality of life in Puerto Rico has consistently deteriorated during the same period of time. This deterioration is demonstrated by a variety of socioeconomic losses including a sizable increase: in the rate of criminal activity, the high rate of construction activity that led to the virtual disappearance of farmland and production in the agricultural industry, and the prevalence of narcotic use, mainly among youth members of society. In other words, the transformation resulted in a high level of economic growth that was not fully transferred to significant improvement in quality of life. Sustainable development, preached as the new economic paradigm of the XXI century, is just another fashionable term used by politicians and policymakers. In reality, the economic instruments used to measure welfare seriously contradict the sustainable development discourse. After fifty (50) years, a critically inefficient measure of welfare is still in use, leading to erroneous policies, and, in turn, posing increasing social, economic, and environmental costs. In order to account for the positive and negative consequences of economic growth, especially those that hinder society's quality of life, and to achieve the desired level of sustainable development and a better quality of life, an Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare 12 must be used. Other indexes have been developed in order to fulfill better standards of measuring the quality of life. In this study an attempt is made to develop, for the first time, an Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) for the economy of Puerto Rico during the year period of 1970 to 2006. The model followed the original and revised ISEW by Daly and Cobb (1989, 1994) and includes variables from the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) , among which the cost of crime figures prominently, since it is probably the most formidable social problem currently faced in Puerto Rico. Under conventional welfare measures, the cost of crime is counted as a contributor to economic growth, since anti-crime expenditures could contribute to an increase in economic well-being. In the case of ISEW and GPI, crime expenditures or income derived from such activities are considered a cost rather than a benefit. The model also incorporates the costs of commuting, the costs of personal pollution control, automobile accidents, air and water pollution, the loss of natural habitats and farmlands, the depletion of non-renewable resources, and climate and ozone depletion. Using the Max-Neef Threshold Hypothesis, research is focused on the relationship between economic growth, as measured by GDP, and quality of life. 13 II. Building the ISEW Accounts for the economy of Puerto Rico The main framework used to construct the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (/SEW) for Puerto Rico and their corresponding adjustments is based upon the procedures developed by Daly Cobb (1989, 1994) for the United States ISEW). The Index also includes the cost of crime originally calculated by the Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) (see Box 1). All the monetary figures were converted to real terms by adjusting to inflation through the 2000 implicit price index based upon the United States dollars base. The ISEW accounts or particular items are deflated by applying different implicit deflators. Box 1 The Index of Sustainability and Economic Welfare (ISEW) Items and Column legends Column A: Year Column B: Personal Consumer Expenditures (PCE) Column C: Income Inequality Column D: Adjusted Consumer Expenditures olumn E(+): Services from Domestic Labor olumn F(+): Services from Consumer Durables Column G(+): Services from Streets and Highways Column H(+): Public Expenditure on Health and Education Column 1(-): Consumer Durables: difference between expenditure and value of services Column J(-): Defensive Private Expenditures on Health and Education Column K( -): Costs of Commuting olumn L( -): Costs of Personal Pollution Control olumn M( -): Costs of Automobile Accidents Column Column Column Column Column Column Column olumn Column N( -): Costs of Water Pollution 0(-): Costs of Air Pollution P( -): Costs of Noise Pollution Q(-): Loss of Natural Habitats R(-): Loss of Farmlands S(-): Depletion of Non-Renewable Resources T(-): Costs of Climate Change U(-): Costs of Ozone Depletion V(+): Net Capital Growth (in here instead "the Cost of Crime"). Column W(+): Net Change in International Position (omitted). olumn X: Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare\ Column Y: Per capita Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare 14 The ISEW for Puerto Rico was prepared using data for the fiscal years (JulyJune) 1970 to 2006. The main statistical sources of data were obtained from the Puerto Rico Planning Board (PRPB), the agency that is responsible for the calculation of the National Accounts. Data was also collected from other local state agencies and documents from the United States Federal Agencies as well as those of the federal government. A. Consumer Expenditure and Income Inequality Adjustment (Columns B and C). The supporters of ISEW accounts state that there are a number of difficulties in using consumption as a welfare index. The assumption is that one unit of consumption used is much the same as another in terms of delivering welfare. This argument denied that consumption may offer a diminishing return in terms of welfare, that is, a higher level of consumption generates a lower level of welfare. Meanwhile, another pitfall of such an approach is as follows; a given dollar unit of consumption in good X is equally valued to another dollar of another unit of good Y, even if the former were a better product. For example, a dollar value of fatanimal- food consumption is equally valued as non-fat calories consumption. However, the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) is the main welfare figure for the calculation of the ISEW. It was obtained from the National Accounts, published annually by the PRPB. However, the PCE vector is not taken as such on its monetary basis. In order to adjust the PCE, in response to the effects of unequal distribution of income in the economy, the traditional approach is followed by adjusting the PCE to income inequality. The procedure is as follows: PCE adjusted where, PCE = PCE x (1-G) = Personal Consumption Expenditure (real or nominal) 15 G = Gini Indexes for 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000 1 Likewise the original studies of ISEW, an index of inequality were used to provide an adjustment to the welfare measure. The PCE values, once weighted by G, were deflated by the Implicit Price Index of PCE. The results are shown in Table 1 and the Graph 1. B. Services from Domestic Labor (Column E) Services from household workers also contribute to economic welfare even though they are not traded within the market system. GDP figures, generally, do not include this contribution even though it is important to economic stability, personal consumption, and improvements in economic welfare. This study takes into account two main sources of household output: domestic workers (non-market workers) and regular market workers. According to the 2006 American Time Use Survey 2, it is assumed that female market workers dedicated 2.7 hours per day in household activities, while men did so at 2.1 hours per day, --a week of five days. The weighted average is 2.4 hours per day. The non-market household services are estimated at 7.6 hours per day, for a five day/week. In this study, household hour worked is valued at a yearly market wage rate. The data for fiscal year of either domestic and market workers came from the Department of Labor and Human Resources. These hours were valued by the average wage rate per hour (AWR), at 2000 prices, and deflated by the implicit price for PCE. The AWR was computed by dividing the total amount of wages and salaries of the employees, and then divided by a normalized 2,080 hours per year. Table 2 shows the imputed value for domestic household services. 1 The Gini Index measures income inequality and their values range from 0 to 1. According to Segarra-Almestica (2007), although income inequality in Puerto Rico increased considerably by 1990 to 2000, it decreased from 1970 to 1980. 2 u. S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. American Time Use Survey-2006 Results: www.bls.gov/news.release/atus.nrO.htm 16 Table 1 Real Personal Consumption Expenditures Adjusted to Income Inequality: 2000 year prices Col. A Col B Col (4) = (1-Col Col. C Col. (5) C) Year Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) (millions $) Inequality Index Gini (G) at PCE adj = PCE x (1-G) (millions $) Implicit PCE Price Index (base =2000) Col. B Col. (5) Real Adjusted PCE (millions $) = Col D 1970 $3,746.5 0.5600 $1,648.5 0.3091 $5,333.0 1971 $4,271.9 0.5552 $1,900.1 0.3215 $5,910.6 1972 $4,736.8 0.5504 $2,129.7 0.3318 $6,417.7 1973 $5,233.5 0.5456 $2,378.1 0.3474 $6,845.1 1974 $5,777.1 0.5408 $2,652.8 0.3865 $6,864.5 1975 $6,472.8 0.5360 $3,003.4 0.4433 $6,775.3 1976 $7,490.0 0.5312 $3,511.3 0.4713 $7,450.3 1977 $8,238.9 0.5264 $3,901.9 0.4879 $7,998.2 1978 $8,887.2 0.5216 $4,251.6 0.5086 $8,358.8 1979 $9,667.2 0.5168 $4,671.2 0.5369 $8,701.1 1980 $10,755.9 0.5120 $5,248.9 0.6034 $8,698.9 1981 $11,898.2 0.5108 $5,820.6 0.6623 $8,788.6 1982 $12,541.5 0.5096 $6,150.4 0.6993 $8,794.4 1983 $13,299.2 0.5084 $6,537.9 0.7206 $9,072.4 1984 $14,063.3 0.5072 $6,930.4 0.7280 $9,519.6 1985 $15,057.4 0.5060 $7,438.4 0.7459 $9,972.7 1986 $15,746.4 0.5048 $7,797.6 0.7487 $10,414.8 1987 $16,794.6 0.5036 $8,336.8 0.7551 $11,040.3 1988 $18,011.7 0.5024 $8,962.6 0.7788 $11,508.3 1989 $18,872.8 0.5012 $9,413.7 0.8069 $11,666.0 1990 $19,827.2 0.5000 $9,913.6 0.8308 $11,932.8 1991 $20,460.7 0.5064 $10,099.4 0.8674 $11,642.8 1992 $21,520.9 0.5128 $10,485.0 0.8795 $11,921.6 1993 $22,818.5 0.5192 $10,971.1 0.8881 $12,352.8 1994 $24,429.6 0.5256 $11,589.4 0.9055 $12,799.0 1995 $25,923.3 0.5320 $12,132.1 0.9139 $13,274.4 1996 $27,831.0 0.5384 $12,846.8 0.9241 $13,901.7 1997 $30,010.8 0.5448 $13,660.9 0.9420 $14,502.2 1998 $31,980.3 0.5512 $14,352.7 0.9613 $14,930.3 $15,512.3 1999 $34,008.0 0.5576 $15,045.1 0.9699 2000 $36,132.6 0.5640 $15,753.8 1.0000 $15,753.8 2001 $37,590.3 0.5704 $16,148.8 1.0301 $15,676.7 2002 $38,844.9 0.5768 $16,439.1 1.0379 $15,838.6 2003 $40,973.4 0.5832 $17,077.7 1.0555 $16,179.4 2004 $43,396.0 0.5896 $17,809.7 1.0720 $16,613.3 2005 $46,299.8 0.5960 $18,705.1 1.1062 $16,909.4 2006 $49,579.4 0.6024 $19,712.8 1.1587 $17,012.8 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board of Puerto Rico and Segarra-Almestica, (2007).Gini Indexes are for Census years of 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000. Non-Census years were extrapolated using the average rate of growth between each Census year. 17 $18,000.0 Graph 1 Personal Consumption Expenditures, adjusted at 2000 prices (figures in millions $, and percentage) .---------=--=--------:----:....----=--:------,··12.0?lo $16,000.0 . 1 \ $14,000.0 ~ $10,000.0 $8,000.0 11 8.0% 1\ \ $12,000.0 1 10.0% ~ , I I I I\ I \ I I I 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% $6,000.0 0.0% $4,000.0 . -2.0% $2,000.0 - - - p e E Adjusted at 2000 prices .... Rate of Growth Source: Table 1 18 Table 2 The Domestic Household Services; Fiscal years 1970 to 2006 CoLA Year 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Market HousehoLd Hours (thousand) 428,064 436,176 460,512 464,880 464,256 436,176 423,072 431,184 450,528 458,640 469,872 473,616 448,656 438,672 463,632 472,992 484,848 520,416 544,752 591,552 600,912 609,648 609,648 623,376 630,864 655,824 681,408 703,248 710,736 713,232 717,600 713,856 718,848 741,312 752,544 772,512 781,872 CoLE Non-Market HousehoLd Hours (thousand) 488,342 496,392 509,808 521,435 520,541 544,690 559,000 551,845 563,472 588,515 601,931 609,981 634,130 648,440 642,179 652,912 650,229 638,602 636,813 638,602 687,794 692,266 690,477 688,688 718,203 719,992 724,464 728,936 733,408 740,563 768,290 770,973 760,240 769,184 769,184 755,768 533,957 Average Wage Rate at 2000 prices $5.79 $6.20 $6.29 $6.74 $6.58 $6.70 $6.72 $6.84 $6.79 $6.99 $6.66 $6.50 $6.61 $6.68 $6.81 $6.92 $7.02 $7.01 $7.15 $6.89 $7.02 $6.92 $6.91 $7.44 $7.57 $7.66 $7.77 $7.91 $8.02 $8.33 $8.57 $8.71 $8.79 $8.69 $8.93 $8.92 $8.67 ReaL HousehoLd Output (millons $) $8,728.0 $9,502.0 $9,976.9 $10,894.8 $10,620.4 $10,992.1 $11,144.5 $11,293.5 $11,514.7 $12,288.9 $11,978.7 $11,843.3 $12,234.0 $12,502.7 $12,825.1 $13,253.1 $13,490.2 $13,537.5 $13,963.6 $13,798.6 $14,884.3 $14,795.2 $14,749.2 $15,966.1 $16,793.6 $17,203.0 $17,724.1 $18,307.3 $18,693.7 $19,580.6 $20,685.6 $21,061.4 $21,080.3 $21,213.8 $21,897.5 $21,795.5 $21,432.9 Source: Department of Labor and Human Resources, and Puerto Rico Planning Board. C. Services from Consumer Durables (Col. F) As part of any figure from the National Accounts, durable consumer goods are related to the expenditure on consumer durables. These expenditures do not 19 n represent consumption within the accounting period since durable goods, by its very nature, can contribute to welfare enhancement in several subsequent time periods. Daly and Cobb (1989) argued that the appropriate way to treat the expenditures of consumer durables is to include them as flow of services during the accounting period from the given net stock of consumer durables in a year. On Table 3, ISEW Accounts value the service flows borne from the use of the stock of consumer durables (column F), which is later subtracted from the expenditure on durables (Column I). Cobb and Daly (1989) calculated the value of these services by considering a fixed share (10%) of the annual stock of consumer durables. Following Daly and Cobb's original approach, the stock of capital was estimated using the perpetual inventory formula: K (t) = K (t-1) x (1- d) + In (t) where; K (t) = capital stock at year t; d = depreciation rate (=6.5%) In (t) = investment at time year t, and; K (t-1) = capital stock at year t-1 The stock value in 1940 is assumed to be equal to the investment value for that year, with a nominal value of $16.3 million. A depreciation rate of 6.5% and 10% of the stock value as flows of service was used. Given these assumptions, the final value is shown in Table 3. 20 Table 3 Stock of Durable Consumer Goods and Services (millions $); current prices. Fiscal Years Stock of Durable Consumer Goods (millions $) Investment (millions $) Flow of services (10% x Stock) Difference between flow and stock of durable goods 1970 $3,332.6 $602.1 $333.3 $268.8 1971 3,809.0 693.0 380.9 312.1 1972 4,365.4 804.0 436.5 367.5 1973 4,981.7 900.0 498.2 401.8 1974 5,495.9 838.0 549.6 288.4 1975 5,997.6 859.0 599.8 259.2 1976 6,689.8 1,082.0 669.0 413.0 1977 7,473.0 1,218.0 747.3 470.7 1978 8,389.2 1,402.0 838.9 563.1 647.5 1979 9,434.9 1,591.0 943.5 1980 10,418.6 1,597.0 1,041.9 555.1 1981 11,458.4 1,717.0 1,145.8 571.2 1982 12,295.8 1,582.2 1,229.6 352.6 1983 13,152.0 1,655.4 1,315.2 340.2 1984 14,301.4 2,004.3 1,430.1 574.2 1985 15,643.8 2,272.0 1,564.4 707.6 1986 17,031.9 2,404.9 1,703.2 701.7 1987 18,483.6 2,558.8 1,848.4 710.4 1988 19,949.1 2,666.9 1,994.9 672.0 1989 21,275.5 2,623.1 2,127.5 495.6 1990 22,492.2 2,599.6 2,249.2 350.4 1991 23,443.9 2,413.7 2,344.4 69.3 1992 24,439.0 2,519.0 2,443.9 75.1 1993 25,825.3 2,974.8 2,582.5 392.3 1994 27,375.9 3,229.2 2,737.6 491.6 1995 29,225.7 3,629.3 2,922.6 706.7 1996 31,080.6 3,754.6 3,108.1 646.5 822.6 1997 33,203.4 4,143.0 3,320.3 1998 35,454.4 4,409.3 3,545.4 863.8 1999 37,944.6 4,794.7 3,794.5 1,000.3 2000 40,088.3 4,610.0 4,008.8 601.2 2001 41,964.7 4,482.2 4,196.5 285.7 2002 43,849.0 4,612.0 4,384.9 227.1 2003 45,612.9 4,614.1 4,561.3 52.8 2004 47,395.1 49,827.2 4,747.0 5,512.8 4,739.5 4,982.7 7.5 530.1 $52,320.8 $5,732.4 $5,232.1 $500.3 2005 2006 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board and calculations from the authors. 21 D. Difference (Coli - Col F) between Expenditures and the Value of Services· from Consumer Durables (Col. I) Another ISEW approach is to compute the difference between expenditures on consumer goods and the service flowing from these goods during the accounting period (column F). Needless to say, this type of procedure is not conducted in National Accounts, but still seems to have some relevance as used by Milton Friedman in his Permanent Income Hypothesis (PI H). The PIH defines consumption as "to designate the value of the services that it is planned to consume". For the purposes of presenting this paper, the difference between the time series service value and the total consumer expenditures was calculated. The difference was then deflated using the Implicit Price Index of Durable Consumption Goods (Base Price at 2000). Table A-4 shows the values of the differences. E. Services from Streets and Highways (Col. G) Government expenditures are included in the ISEW to the extent that they are non-defensive, and therefore, make a positive contribution to welfare. In general, public services are considered as defensive expenditures on the grounds that they do not contribute to the welfare of society. Government expenditures on streets and highways are deemed non-defensive and some of their services flows do account to the welfare index. In this study, the flow of services was determined by equating it to 20% of a given capital stock of road, highway, school and other public works for each year. The capital stock follows the perpetual inventory formula with a depreciation rate of 4.5%. The initial stock value is $6.7 million and is equal to investment expenditures of fiscal year 1948. Table 5 indicates the respective estimated values. 22 Table 4 Consumer Durable Goods Difference between Expenditures and Services, at 2000 prices; 1970 to 2006. (Col I)-(Col F) (Col F). Fiscal Year Flows of Services (millions $) Durable Consumer Goods Expenditures (millions $) 1970 $333.3 $602.1 $268.8 0.4031 1971 380.9 693.0 312.1 0.4137 754.3 1972 436.5 804.0 367.5 0.4232 868.3 1973 498.2 900.0 401.8 0.4354 922.9 1974 549.6 838.0 288.4 0.4544 634.8 1975 599.8 859.0 259.2 0.5056 512.7 1976 669.0 1,082.0 413.0 0.5420 762.1 1977 747.3 1,218.0 470.7 0.5661 831.5 1978 838.9 1,402.0 563.1 0.5979 941.8 1979 943.5 1,591.0 647.5 0.6513 994.2 1980 1,041.9 1,597.0 555.1 0.7182 773.0 1981 1,145.8 1,717.0 571.2 0.7817 730.7 1982 1,229.6 1,582.2 352.6 0.7908 445.9 1983 1,315.2 1,655.4 340.2 0.8235 413.1 1984 1,430.1 2,004.3 574) 0.8574 669.6 1985 1,564.4 2,272.0 707.6 0.8794 804.7 1986 1,703.2 2,404.9 701.7 0.8928 785.9 1987 1,848.4 2,558.8 710.4 0.9008 788.7 1988 1,994.9 2,666.9 672.0 0.9246 726.8 1989 2,127.5 2,623.1 495.6 0.9438 525.1 1990 2,249.2 2,599.6 350.4 0.9099 385.1 1991 2,344.4 2,413.7 69.3 0.9347 74.2 1992 2,443.9 2,519.0 75.1 0.9209 81.5 1993 2,582.5 2,974.8 392.3 0.9356 419.3 1994 2,737.6 3,229.2 491.6 0.9524 516.2 1995 2,922.6 3,629.3 706.7 0.9511 743.0 1996 3,108.1 3,754.6 646.5 0.9597 673.7 1997 3,320.3 4,143.0 822.6 0.9740 844.6 1998 3,545.4 4,409.3 863.8 1.0027 861.5 1999 3,794.5 4,794.7 1,000.3 0.9832 1,017.3 Differences at current price (millions $) Implicit Price Index for Durable Goods (2000=100) Real Differences (2000 prices, millions $) $667.0 2000 4,008.8 4,610.0 601.2 1.0000 601.2 2001 4,196.5 4,482.2 285.7 0.9533 299.7 2002 4,384.9 4,612.0 227.1 0.9795 231.8 2003 4,561.3 4,614.1 52.8 0.9951 53.1 2004 4,739.5 4,747.0 7.5 1.0128 7.4 2005 4,982.7 5,512.8 530.1 1.0147 522.4 2006 $5,232.1 $5,732.4 $500.3 1.0162 $492.3 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board and calculations from the authors. 23 Table 5 Capital Stock and Investment in roads, highways, schools and other public works In millions of dollars (current and 2000 constant prices) Fiscal Year Investment in Roads, Highways, Schools, and Other Public Works Stock of Investment Flow of Services, at current prices Implicit price deflator Index for Public Construction (2000 =1.00) Col G. Flow of Services at 2000 prices 1970 $145.5 1971 157.1 145.5 $819 0.2432 $336.9 157.1 939.7 0.2562 1972 $366.8 221.3 221.3 1,118.7 0.2762 $405.0 1973 1974 220.2 221.6 220.2 221.6 1,288.5 1,452.1 0.2958 $435.6 0.3382 $429.4 1975 234.4 234.4 1,621.2 0.3878 $418.0 1976 1977 1978 270.5 239.5 270.5 239.5 1,818.7 1,976.4 0.3986 0.4134 $456.3 $478.1 254.6 254.6 2,142.1 0.4522 $473.7 1979 272.0 272.0 1980 265.6 265.6 2,317.7 2,479.0 0.4902 0.5275 $470.0 $472.8 1981 249.4 249.4 2,616.8 0.5989 $436.9 1982 187.9 187.9 2,687.0 0.6468 $415.4 1983 180.1 180.1 2,746.1 0.6691 $410.4 1984 235.8 235.8 2,858.4 0.6808 1985 254.9 254.9 2,984.6 0.6842 $419.8 $436.2 1986 192.8 192.8 3,043.1 0.6840 $444.9 1987 1988 223.9 223.9 0.6895 $454.0 300.2 356.0 300.2 356.0 3,130.1 3,289.4 3,497.4 0.6839 0.7458 $481.0 $468.9 $485.6 1989 1990 391.6 391.6 1991 404.8 510.3 404.8 3,731.6 3,968.5 0.7685 0.7835 510.3 4,300.2 0.8085 4,663.9 4,941.8 0.8457 $551.5 0.8791 1992 1993 557.2 557.2 1994 487.8 487.8 $506.5 $531.9 1995 560.4 560.4 5,279.9 0.9015 $562.2 $585.6 1996 1997 785.7 785.7 5,828.0 0.9207 $633.0 785.6 785.6 6,351.3 0.9401 $675.6 1998 1999 1,007.8 1,007.8 7,073.3 0.9638 $733.9 1,319.2 1,312.3 1,319.2 8,074.2 1,312.3 9,023.1 0.9848 1.0000 $819.9 2000 2001 2002 1,262.2 1,262.2 0.9972 $990.7 988.7 988.7 9,879.3 10,423.5 1.0047 $1,037.5 2003 1,117.5 1,117.5 11,071.9 1.0206 $1,084.8 2004 1,148.0 1,148.0 11,721.6 1.0521 $1,114.1 2005 1,093.4 12,287.5 1.1174 $1,099.6 2006 $1,094.4 1,093.4 1,094.4 $12,829 1.1656 $1,100.6 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board and calculations from the authors. 24 $902.3 F. Public Expenditures on Health and Education (Col. H) ISEW studies have expressed that public expenditures on health and education may contribute either to the physical well-being of the nation by public consumption, or to building up of the human capital skills base. Some health expenditures may be purely defensive against activities considered elsewhere in the economy as consumption. For example, the treatment of smoking-related illness-also counted as consumer expenditures under any traditional National Accounts-is understood to contribute to human's well being, but it is inappropriate to add such costs as a direct contributor to welfare. Table 6 shows the estimates of non-defensive public expenditures in health and education, valued at year 2000 prices. Data on education were taken from the 1990 to 1996 education budget of the U.S. Department of Education; and data from 1997 to 1996 were available at http://www.presupuesto.gobierno.pr. posted by the Puerto Rico Office of Management and Budget (O{idna de Gerenda y Presupuesto del Estado Ubre Asodado de Puerto Rico, OGP). Data from 1970 to 1990 were extrapolated backward using the annual rate of growth of public expenditures in education per capita (6.2%) for 1990 to 2006. The current price education expenditure per capita was $314 in 1990 and $826 in 2006. The health expenditures were computed by summing up the expenditures of public agencies expenditures such as the State Department of Health, agencies in charged of Health Public Reform, the Corporation of Cardiovascular Services, and the Correctional Agencies health systems. The data from 1997 to 2006 came from OGP, and for the years 1970 to 1996, the values were extrapolated using an annual rate of growth of 4.4%. 25 Table 6 Non Defensive Public Health and Education Expenditures (in millio'ns $, except Implicit price deflator) Fiscal Year Education Expenditures Health Expenditures Grand Total Non-Defensive Expenditures 1970 $305.2 $365.4 $670.7 1971 $325.5 $388.fl $714.1 1972 $347.2 $413.2 $760.3 1973 $370.2 $439.3 1974 $394.8 $467.1 $335.3 Weighted Implicit price Deflator; 2000 =1.00 0.1953 Col. H Real Public Nondefensive Expenditures, 2000 prices $1,716.7 $357.0 0.2084 $1,713.1 $380.2 0.2223 $1,710.0 $809.6 $404.8 0.2346 $1,725.5 $862.0 $431.0 0.2418 $1,782.2 1975 $421.1 $496.7 $917.8 $458.9 0.2598 $1,766.1 1976 $449.1 $528.2 $977.2 $488.6 0.2923 $1,671.8 1977 $478.9 $561.6 $1,040.5 $520.3 0.3109 $1,673.4 1978 $510.8 $597.1 $1,107.9 $554.0 0.3305 $1,675.9 1979 $544.7 $634.9 $1,179.7 $589.8 0.3524 $1,674.0 1980 $580.9 $675.1 $1,256.1 $628.0 0.3752 $1,673.9 1981 $619.5 $713.1 $1,332.6 $666.3 0.4151 $1,605.4 1982 $660.7 $753.1 $1,413.8 $706.9 0.4502 $1,570.3 1983 $704.6 $795.4 $1,500.1 $750.0 0.4767 $1,573.4 1984 $751.5 $840.1 $1,591.6 $795.8 0.5089 $1,563.8 1985 $801.4 $887.3 $1,688.7 $844.4 0.5286 $1,597.4 1986 $854.7 $937.1 $1,791.8 $895.9 0.5484 $1,633.7 1987 $911.5 $989.8 $1,901.3 $950.6 0.5774 $1,646.5 1988 $972.1 $1,045.3 $2,017.5 $1,008.7 0.6125 $1,647.0 1989 $1,036.7 $1,104.1 $2,140.8 $1,070.4 0.6425 $1,665.9 1990 $1,105.6 $1,166.1 $2,271.7 $1,135.9 0.6632 $1,712.7 1991 $1,209.0 $1,229.3 $2,438.3 $1,219.1 0.6974 $1,748.1 1992 $1,263.5 $1,295.9 $2,559.4 $1,279.7 0.7435 $1,721.1 1993 $1,320.6 $1,366.1 $2,686.7 $1,343.4 0.8013 $1,676.4 1994 $1,456.4 $1,440.1 $2,896.5 $1,448.3 0.8265 $1,752.3 1995 $1,551.4 $1,518.2 $3,069.5 $1,534.8 0.8324 $1,843.7 1996 $1,789.2 $1,600.4 $3,389.6 $1,694.8 0.8579 $1,975.6 1997 $1,850.8 $1,687.2 $3,538.0 $1,769.0 0.8893 $1,989.2 1998 $1,909.6 $1,675.6 $3,585.2 $1,792.6 0.9282 $1,931.3 1999 $2,074.5 $1,794.8 $3,869.3 $1,934.6 0.9621 $2,010.8 2000 $2,397.7 $2,677.1 $5,074.8 $2,537.4 1.0000 $2,537.4 2001 $2,190.3 $2,181.3 $4,371.6 $2,185.8 1.0460 $2,089.7 2002 $2,268.7 $2,310.2 $4,578.9 $2,289.5 1.0817 $2,116.6 2003 $2,697.3 $2,336.1 $5,033.4 $2,516.7 1.1054 $2,276.7 2004 $2,721.1 $2,578.0 $5,299.1 $2,649.6 1.1231 $2,359.1 2005 $3,044.3 $2,760.4 $5,804.7 $2,902.4 1.1422 $2,541.1 2006 $3,244.2 $2,623.4 $5,867.6 $2,933.8 1.1593 $2,530.6 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board and calculations from the authors. 26 To compute the non-defensive expenditures a 50% of total expenditures' were assumed. The implicit price deflator used to adjust to inflation is a weighted one between two consumer expenditures- price indexes; medical services and funeral expenses and education. These implicit price deflators were at 1954 prices. The 1954 price base was changed to a 2000 price base. G. Defensive Private Expenditures on Health and Education (Col. J) Private expenditures on education and health, both included in the peE vector, have to be adjusted to private defensive expenditures. As in the case of public expenditure, one half of the expenditure on health and one half of the expenditure on furthering education were taken to be non-defensive consumption expenditures. Table 7 shows the results. 27 Table 7 Defensive Private Health and Education Expenditures Millions $, except weighted implicit price deflator Fiscal Year Medical Care and Funeral Services (millions $) Education Expenditures (millions $) Weighted implicit price deflator 2000 =1.00 0.195 Col. J Defensive Private Health and Education 2000 prices. (millions $) 576.7 1970 191.1 34.2 Medical Care and Education Expenditures Total (millions $) 112.7 1971 238.4 40.5 139.5 0.208 669.1 1972 243.2 50.8 147.0 0.222 661.2 1973 292.8 59.0 175.9 0.235 749.8 1974 322.3 75.0 198.7 0.242 821.5 1975 380.4 92.9 236.7 0.260 910.8 1976 417.0 113.8 265.4 0.292 908.1 1977 492.5 145.5 319.0 0.311 1,026.0 1978 593.1 168.5 380.8 0.331 1,152.1 1979 690.8 189.0 439.9 0.352 1,248.5 1980 725.5 212.8 469.2 0.375 1,250.4 1981 849.5 235.5 542.5 0.415 1,307.1 1982 918.8 266.7 592.8 0.450 1,316.7 1983 1,016.0 305.2 660.6 0.477 1,385.8 1984 1,118.7 334.8 726.8 0.509 1,428.2 1985 1,297.3 361.6 829.5 0.529 1,569.2 1986 1,412.9 398.5 905.7 0.548 1,651.5 1987 1,591.3 434.4 1,012.9 0.577 1,754.2 1988 1,764.5 501.3 1,132.9 0.613 1,849.8 1989 1,941.3 573.4 1,257.4 0.643 1,956.9 1990 2,146.0 644.2 1,395.1 0.663 2,103.6 1991 2,193.1 677.0 1,435.1 0.697 2,057.6 1992 2,575.9 726.9 1,651.4 0.744 2,221.1 1993 2,835.5 757.2 1,796.4 0.801 2,241.7 1994 3,273.5 783.5 2,028.5 0.827 2,454.4 1995 3,537.1 866.4 2,201.8 0.832 2,645.0 1996 3,966.5 911.3 2,438.9 0.858 2,843.0 1997 4,511.7 939.6 2,725.7 0.889 3,064.9 1998 5,235.3 953.0 3,094.2 0.928 3,333.5 1999 5,910.8 1,044.9 3,477.8 0.962 3,614.8 2000 6,299.3 1,161.1 3,730.2 1.000 3,730.2 2001 6,586.6 1,169.7 3,878.2 1.046 3,707.6 2002 6,768.8 1,311.0 4,039.9 1.082 3,734.9 2003 6,960.4 1,345.3 4,152.9 1.105 3,756.8 2004 7,162.5 1,469.4 4,315.9 1.123 3,842.8 2005 7,527.7 1,503.7 4,515.7 1.142 3,953.6 2006 $7,935.3 $1,568.0 $4,751.6 1.159 $4,098.7 Sources: Puerto Rico Planning Board and calculations from the authors. 28 H. Cost of Commuting (Col K) The cost of commuting has two main components: (a) the opportunity cost in terms of leisure time; and (b) motor vehicle user costs, such as depreciation, fuel, gas and oil, interest payments, and so on. Table 7 shows the travel to work characteristics in 2000. 3 As shown, 70% of total workers who traveled daily traveled alone, or 892, 122 workers-- Le. 77.6% of the total employment in Puerto Rico. 4 The average worker traveled time was 29.4 minutes per day, a figure that not only surpassed the United States average (25.5 minutes), but also the four regions of the country5. To compute the opportunity cost of the traveled time per worker in terms of leisure (Cd, the following equation was used: CL = (Average time traveled per day per worker) x (cost per minute in real wage terms) x (Factor to adjust the worth of leisure time relative to working hours). Table 8 shows the cost of commuting using the opportunity cost of leisure time, which was estimated using a factor of 1.5. This implies a given monetary cost due to the time devoted to travel, instead of using other alternatives. The following equation was used: Cc = CL x Total Commuting Workers X 245 working days per year. Cost figures were deflated using the implicit price index of transportation, at base prices in 2000. In 2006, the cost of commuting, at 2000 prices, meant an annual The information was gathered from the 2000 U.S. Census, Summary File 3 and published also by the Statistical Abstract of the U.S. 2005. 4 Puerto Rico, Department of Labor and Human Resources. 2000. 5 The figure of average time to work (minutes) was as follow; Northeast, 28.2; Midwest, 23.2; South, 25.6 and West, 25.7. US Census, 2000, Summary File 3. See Table 7. The cost per minute was calculated using the average real wage rate per hour at 2000 prices. See Table 2. 3 29 value equal to S1,507.0 million. This figure should be considered as a decreasing element in the welfare index of any country. Table 8 Travel to Work Characteristics for Puerto Rico; 2000 Means of Transportation Driving alone Carpooled Public transportation Walked Motorcycle, bike, and other means of transportation Worked at home Number of Workers Number of workers traveled to work Total Workers over 16 years old Percentage of workers traveling to work Average Travel Time (minutes) Number of workers 626,578 163,279 48,322 36,834 17,109 15,964 908,386 892,122 1,150,000 77.6% 29.4 Sources: 2000 U.S. Bureau of the Census, Summary File 3. The figure of total workers over 16 years old are from the Department of Labor and Human Resources. 30 Table 9 Cost of Commuting-Opportunity cost in Leisure Time (Component (a)) 2000 millions Fiscal Years Total Employment (000) S Persons working over 16 years old (thousand) at Average Wage Rate per hour at 2000 prices Cost per minute (2000 prices) Opportunity cost in leisure time per minute bt Cc = Opportunity cost in leisure time (2000 millions $) 1970 686 532.3 $5.79 $0.0965 $0.1448 $555.2 1971 699 542.4 $6.20 $0.1033 $0.1550 $605.5 1972 738 572.7 $6.29 $0.1048 $0.1572 $648.4 1973 745 578.1 $6.74 $0.1123 $0.1685 $701.5 1974 744 577.4 $6.58 $0.1097 $0.1645 $684.0 1975 699 542.4 $6.70 $0.1117 $0.1676 $654.9 1976 678 526.1 $6.72 $0.1120 $0.1680 $636.8 1977 691 536.2 $6.84 $0.1140 $0.1711 $660.8 1978 722 560.3 $6.79 $0.1132 $0.1698 $685.2 1979 735 570.4 $6.99 $0.1164 $0.1747 $717.6 1980 753 584.3 $6.66 $0.1109 $0.1664 $700.4 1981 759 589.0 $6.50 $0.1084 $0.1626 $689.7 1982 719 558.0 $6.61 $0.1102 $0.1654 $664.6 1983 703 545.5 $6.68 $0.1114 $0.1670 $656.4 $0.1703 $707.4 $732.9 1984 743 576.6 $6.81 $0.1136 1985 758 588.2 $6.92 $0.1153 $0.1730 1986 777 603.0 $7.02 $0.1170 $0.1755 $762.3 1987 834 647.2 $7.01 $0.1168 $0.1752 $816.9 1988 873 677.5 $7.15 $0.1192 $0.1789 $872.8 1989 948 735.7 $6.89 $0.1148 $0.1723 $912.9 1990 963 747.3 $7.02 $0.1170 $0.1755 $944.6 199-~ 977 758.2 $6.92 $0.1153 $0.1729 $944.3 1992 977 758.2 $6.91 $0.1151 $0.1727 $943.1 1993 999 775.2 $7.44 $0.1241 $0.1861 $1,039.2 1994 1,011 784.6 $7.57 $0.1262 $0.1893 $1,069.9 1995 1,051 815.6 $7.66 $0.1276 $0.1914 $1,124.7 1996 1,092 847.4 $7.77 $0.1295 $0.1942 $1,185.2 $1,246.1 1997 1,127 874.6 $7.91 $0.1319 $0.1978 1998 1,139 883.9 $8.02 $0.1337 $0.2005 $1,276.4 1999 1,143 887.0 $8.33 $0.1389 $0.2084 $1,331.2 2000 1,150 892.4 $8.57 $0.1428 $0.2141 $1,376.5 2001 1,144 887.8 $8.71 $0.1452 $0.2178 $1,392.9 2002 1,152 894.0 $8.79 $0.1465 $0.2197 $1,414.9 2003 1,188 921.9 $8.69 $0.1449 $0.2173 $1,442.9 2004 1,206 935.9 $8.93 $0.1488 $0.2233 $1,505.1 2005 1,238 960.7 $8.92 $0.1487 $0.2231 $1,543.9 2006 1,253 965.0 $8.67 $0.1445 $0.2168 $1,507.0 Source: 2000 U.S. Bureau of the Census, Summary File 3, and the Department of Labor and Human Resources bt equal to the cost per (figures of total employment). at under the assumption of 77.6% of total workers minute x 1.5 31 The second component of the cost of commuting is the motor vehicles '-user costs. According to the American Automobile Association (AAA), in the United States the average cost of driving a new passenger car in 2004 was 56.2 cents per mile or $8,431 per year. The three largest components of motor -vehicle costs were depreciation, full insurance, and fuel. The MA cost per mile between 1994 and 2004 were as follows: Year Cost per mile (cents) 39.4 41.2 42.6 44.8 46.1 47.0 49.1 51.0 50.2 51.7 56.2 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Source: American Automobile Association (AAA) Cost estimation for years 2005 and 2006 was done using the 1970-1993 period annual rate of growth of 3.6%. Since these figures are for new cars, an adjustment was performed for the whole stock of motor vehicles used in commuting. Further adjustments were made in order to estimate the true number of workers commuting, since not all vehicles were not driven vehicles to work. Table 8 shows the number of workers under the categories of driving alone and carpooling. Under the assumption that a carpool consists of two persons per car, the total estimated number of workers is 708,218 or 61.6% of total workers in 2000. 32 Therefore, the rate of 61.6% was used to estimate the number of workers driving their own cars for the years beyond 2000. 6 Given all these adjustments and parameters, the following equation was used to determine the user-cost for commuting workers: Cv = (AAA cost per miles x 0.75, at 2000 prices 7 ) x (Number of workers driven cars) x (245 working days/year) x (19.6 miles x trip). Table 10 shows the cost of commuting by vehicle-users between 1970 and 2006. The two components of this cost are presented in Table 11. The total cost of commuting in 2006 was $2,800 million at 2000 prices. 61t was also assumed that the number of miles per trip is fixed at 19.6 miles per year. This figure came from the following calculation; we know that each worker used 29.4 minutes in a commuting trip everyday, which means 0.49 hours (29.4 minutes / 60 minutes per hour). If each worker drives 40 miles per hour, then the number of miles per trip per worker every day is 19.6 miles (0.49 hour x 40 mph). This parameter was deflated by the implicit price index of transportation in Puerto Rico at 2000 prices. Data came form the Puerto Rico Planning Board. 7 33 Table 10 Cost of Commuting -User Costs (Component (b)). 2000 millions S Number of workers driven cars (000) Cost of Commuting -Vehicles User (Cv) (millions $) 1970 Adjusted AAA average cost of travel per mile cents, 2000 prices $0.4413 422.6 $895.6 1971 $0.4493 430.6 $928.9 1972 $0.4509 454.6 $984.4 1973 $0.4469 458.9 $984.8 1974 $0.4165 458.3 $916.6 1975 $0.3695 430.6 $764.0 Fiscal Years 1976 $0.3584 417.6 $718.7 1977 $0.3580 425.7 $731.8 1978 $0.3532 444.8 $754.4 1979 $0.3394 452.8 $737.9 1980 $0.2842 463.8 $633.0 1981 $0.2574 467.5 $577.9 1982 $0.2469 442.9 $525.0 1983 $0.2648 433.0 $550.6 1984 $0.2823 457.7 $620.5 1985 $0.2954 466.9 $662.3 1986 $0.3051 478.6 $701.2 1987 $0.3114 513.7 $768.2 1988 $0.3054 537.8 $788.7 1989 $0.3057 584.0 $857.1 1990 $0.3176 593.2 $904.8 1991 $0.3108 601.8 $898.2 1992 $0.3198 601.8 $924.1 1993 $0.3437 615.4 $1,015.6 1994 $0.3618 622.8 $1,082.0 1995 $0.3658 647.4 $1,137.2 1996 $0.3717 672.7 $1,200.5 1997 $0.3829 694.2 $1,276.5 1998 $0.3900 701.6 $1,313.8 1999 $0.3910 704.1 $1,322.1 2000 $0.3683 708.4 $1,252.7 2001 $0.3650 704.7 $1,235.3 2002 $0.3655 709.6 $1,245.6 2003 $0.3635 731.8 $1,277.5 2004 $0.3801 742.9 $1,356.1 2005 $0.3680 762.6 $1,347.8 2006 $0.3488 771.8 $1,292.8 Source: American Automobile Association (AAA), and calculations by authors. 34 Table 11 Total Cost of Commuting (Col. K) 2000 millions S Col. K Fiscal Years Cost of Commuting (Cv) (millions $) 2000 prices 1970 Cost of Commuting (Cc) (millions $) 2000 prices $555.2 $895.6 Total Costs of Commuting (Cc +Cv) (millions $, at 2000 prices) $1,450.8 1971 $605.5 $928.9 $1,534.4 1972 $648.4 $984.4 $1,632.8 1973 $701.5 $984.8 $1,686.3 1974 $684.0 $916.6 $1,600.6 1975 $654.9 $764.0 $1,418.9 1976 $636.8 $718.7 $1,355.5 1977 $660.8 $731.8 $1,392.6 1978 $685.2 $754.4 $1,439.6 1979 $717.6 $737.9 $1,455.5 1980 $700.4 $633.0 $1,333.4 1981 $689.7 $577.9 $1,267.6 1982 $664.6 $525.0 $1,189.6 1983 $656.4 $550.6 $1,207.0 1984 $707.4 $620.5 $1,327.9 1985 $732.9 $662.3 $1,395.2 1986 $762.3 $701.2 $1,463.5 1987 $816.9 $768.2 $1,585.1 1988 $872.8 $788.7 $1,661.5 1989 $912.9 $857.1 $1,770.0 1990 $944.6 $904.8 $1,849.4 1991 $944.3 $898.2 $1,842.5 1992 $943.1 $924.1 $1,867.2 1993 $1,039.2 $1,015.6 $2,054.8 1994 $1,069.9 $1,082.0 $2,151.9 1995 $1,124.7 $1,137.2 $2,261.9 1996 $1,185.2 $1,200.5 $2,385.7 1997 $1,246.1 $1,276.5 $2,522.6 1998 $1,276.4 $1,313.8 $2,590.2 1999 $1,331.2 $1,322.1 $2,653.3 2000 $1,376.5 $1,252.7 $2,629.2 2001 $1,392.9 $1,235.3 $2,628.2 2002 $1,414.9 $1,245.6 $2,660.5 2003 $1,442.9 $1,277.5 $2,720.4 2004 $1,505.1 $1,356.1 $2,861.2 2005 $1,543.9 $1,347.8 $2,891.7 2006 $1,507.0 $1,292.8 $2,799.8 Source: American Automobile Association (AAA), and calculations from authors. 35 I. Costs of Pollution Control (Col. L) Daly and Cobb (1989) argued to take into account the personal expenditures on pollution abatement and control for the ISEW Accounts. The main argument is that these costs should be subtracted from personal consumption on the basis that they are defensive. In Puerto Rico, unfortunately there is no information, so far, on this type of expenditure. To compensate for this deficiency, an extrapolation was done by using the United States ratio between the costs of household pollution control to the personal consumption expenditures as shown in the 2006 Genuine Progress Indicator (Talberth et al. 2007). An estimate of the "monetary value for both variables was made for years 2005 and 2006, using their average annual rate of growth. Estimates are shown in Table 12. J. Cost of Automobile Accidents (Col. M) Column M is devoted to the estimation of the non-injury costs of automobile accidents. According to the mainframe of ISEW, this estimation should be subtracted from personal consumption on the basis that they are defensive expenditures, and, consequently, should not be considered as a contributor to welfare. Defensive hospital and medical costs are assumed to be considered in columns Hand J. In Puerto Rico, the Office of Commissioner of Insurance publishes data information of premiums and losses paid by local insurance companies. Table 13 shows the losses paid for automobile accident liabilities and damages between 1997 and 2005. For instance, the sub-total amounted to $395 million in 1997 to $540 million in 2005, both at current prices. 36 Table 12 Total Cost of Pollution Abatement in Puerto Rico: Fiscal Year 1970 to 2006. 2000 millions $ Fiscal Year Col (1) United States Real Personal Consumption 2000 prices billions $ Col (2) Col (3) Ratio = Cost of pollution abatement, billions $ Col (2) Col (1) Col (4) Real Personal Consumption Puerto Rico 2000 price Millions $ Col L. =Col (3) x Col (4) Cost of pollution abatement, Puerto Rico millions $ 1970 $2,451.9 $4.0 0.165% $12,120.5 $20.0 1971 1,545.5 $4.5 0.177% $13,288.1 $23.5 $25.0 1972 1,701.3 $4.7 0.175% $14,274.3 1973 2,833.8 $6.2 0.119% $15,064.1 $33.0 1974 1,811.3 $7.0 0.150% $14,948.8 $37.3 $45.8 1975 1,876.9 $9.0 0.314% $14,601.9 1976 3,035.5 $10.0 0.330% $15,891.3 $51.5 1977 3,164.1 $10.7 0.340% $16,888.0 $57.4 1978 3,303.1 $11.1 0.339% $17,472.3 $59.3 1979 3,383.4 $11.7 0.347% $18,007.3 $62.4 1980 3,374.1 $11.8 0.379% $17,825.6 $67.5 1981 3,411.1 $14.4 0.411% $17,965.2 $75.8 1982 3,470.3 $14.0 0.401% $17,933.1 $72.1 1983 3,668.6 $15.6 0.426% $18,454.8 $78.7 1984 3,863.3 $17.0 0.441% $19,317.3 $85.2 1985 4,064.0 $18.2 0.447% $20,187.6 $90.1 1986 4,228.9 $18.5 0.437% $11,031.4 $92.0 1987 4,369.8 $16.0 0.366% $21,140.8 $81.3 1988 4,546.9 $16.9 0.372% $23,117.6 $86.1 1989 4,675.0 $14.4 0.308% $23,388.1 $72.1 1990 4,770.3 $11.6 0.143% $23,865.6 $58.0 1991 4,778.4 $8.9 0.186% $23,587.5 $43.9 1992 4,934.8 $9.1 0.186% $24,469.5 $45.6 1993 5,099.8 $9.5 0.186% $15,692.2 $47.9 1994 5,290.7 $10.9 0.106% $26,979.4 $55.5 1995 5,433.5 $11.6 0.114% $18,364.2 $60.7 1996 5,619.4 $12.4 0.211% $30,116.3 $66.7 1997 5,831.8 $13.3 0.118% $31,859.0 $72.7 1998 6,125.8 $14.2 0.231% $33,167.2 $77.3 1999 6,438.6 $15.1 0.236% $35,063.9 $81.8 1000 6,739.4 $16.3 0.241% $36,132.6 $87.2 $36,491.4 $91.8 2001 6,910.4 $17.4 0.152% 1002 7,099.3 $18.6 0.162% 2003 7,306.6 $19.9 2004 7,588.6 2005 7,867.3 2006 $8,156.3 $37,425.9 $98.0 0.172% $38,818.1 $105.6 $21.3 0.180% $40,480.9 $113.4 $22.7 0.289% $41,855.0 $121.0 $24.3 0.298% $42,788.8 $127.5 Sources: See Talberth, J; C. Cobb and N. Slattery, The Genuine Progress Indicator, 2006: A Tool for Sustainable Development, Redefining Progress, Oakland, CA ,(www.rprogress.org). 37 The compound annual rate of growth is 4%. Monetary values of years beyond 1990 to 2005 are estimated by this annual rate of growth. The figures are deflated by the implicit price index of personal consumption expenditures of transportation. Table 14 presents the calculation of the cost of automobile accidents in Puerto Rico at year 2000 prices. These figures are adjusted by the Implicit Price of Personal Durable Consumption Goods Expenditures year base 2000. The monetary value for year 2006 is $553.1 million at 2000 prices. Table 13 Losses Paid by Local Insurers in Auto Liabilities and Damages Fiscal Years 1997-2005. Millions $ Fiscal Years 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Sources: Private Auto Liability $49.6 $106.7 $136.9 $149.2 $157.0 $154.0 $151.5 $160.5 $181.5 Commercial Auto Liability $69.3 $63.9 $77.7 $87.1 $87.1 $83.9 $97.2 $89.9 $97.1 .. OffIce of CommIssIoner of Insurance, Private Auto Physical Damage $187.9 $178.9 $197.6 $181.8 $203.4 $197.0 $182.4 $187.0 $197.2 Commercial Auto Physical Damage $87.7 $92.8 $92.7 $82.3 $59.6 $65.9 $60.7 $60.0 $64.6 Commonwealth of Puerto RIco 38 Sub-total $394.5 $442.3 $504.9 $500.4 $507.1 $500.8 $491.8 $497.4 $540.4 Table 14 Cost of Automobile Accidents: Fiscal Year 1970 to 2006 2000 millions S Implicit Price PCE Durable Consumer Goods deflator 2000=1.00 Col. M Real Auto Physical Damages and Liabilities (2000 prices millions $) Fiscal Year Auto Physical Damages and Liabilities (millions $) 1970 $130.6 0.40305 $324.0 1971 $136.0 0.41374 $328.8 1972 $141.7 0.42321 $334.9 1973 $147.7 0.43542 $339.1 1974 $153.8 0.45435 $338.6 1975 $160.3 0.50565 $316.9 1976 $167.0 0.54198 $308.0 1977 $173.9 0.56611 $307.2 1978 $181.2 0.59786 $303.1 1979 $188.8 0.65130 $289.8 1980 $196.7 0.71817 $273.8 1981 $204.9 0.78168 $262.1 1982 $213.5 0.79084 $269.9 1983 $222.4 0.82351 $270.0 1984 $231.7 0.85740 $270.2 1985 $241.4 0.87939 $274.5 1986 $251.4 0.89282 $281.6 1987 $261.9 0.90076 $290.8 1988 $272.9 0.92458 $295.2 1989 $284.3 0.94382 $301.2 1990 $296.2 0.90992 $325.5 1991 $308.6 0.93466 $330.1 1992 $321.5 0.92092 $349.1 1993 $334.9 0.93563 $357.9 1994 $348.9 0.95237 $366.3 1995 $363.5 0.95115 $382.2 1996 $378.7 0.95969 $394.6 1997 $394.5 0.97405 $405.0 1998 $442.3 1.00275 $441.1 1999 $504.9 0.98321 $513.5 2000 $500.4 1.00000 $500.4 2001 $507.1 0.95328 $532.0 2002 $500.8 0.97954 $511.3 2003 $491.8 0.99511 $494.2 2004 $497.4 1.01282 $491.1 2005 $540.4 1.01466 $532.6 2006 1.01618 $553.1 $562.1 Sources: Puerto RIco Planmng Board (CPB) and OffIce of CommIssIoner of Insurance, Puerto Rico and author calculations. 39 K. Cost of Water Pollution (Col. N) There is no data information about the costs of water pollution available for Puerto Rico; therefore, an estimate was done by extrapolating the United States water pollution cost shown in the 2006 GPI. The ratio between water pollution costs per year relative to the United States PCE was computed and then applied to Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico has various environmental pollution issues such as water supplies and soil contamination. Solid waste disposal is one of the main reasons for this type of contamination, and it is actually causing sizable pollution costs in Puerto Rico. Several agency studies have revealed that 8,100 tons of solid waste were being produced daily on the island (1994 figure), and it is growing at an annual rate of 1%. The cost of water pollution is outlined in Table 15. L. Cost of Air Pollution (Col. 0) No historical estimate of air pollution was found for Puerto Rico. Using the same ratio of U.S. Cost of Air Pollution to U.S. PCE estimates, we did a homologous one for Puerto Rico. (See Table 15). M. Cost of Noise Pollution (Col. P) Given the fact that any estimates for noise pollution appears to exist in Puerto Rico, we extrapolated the ratio between the U.S. Cost of Noise Pollution to U.S. PCE to Puerto Rico. Estimates can be found in Table 15. 40 Table 15 Costs of Water, Air, and Noise Pollution to Puerto Rico 2000 prices) Fiscal Years 1970 to 2006 Column N· Column O· Column p. Fiscal Year Cost of water pollution (millions $) Cost of air pollution (millions $) Cost of noise pollution (millions $) 1970 $307.1 $491.1 $61.6 1971 329.3 503.0 67.1 1972 340.1 493.9 70.0 1973 348.0 482.0 71.1 1974 352.0 467.5 71.8 1975 338.1 407.6 69.3 1976 358.5 431.8 72.2 1977 373.4 421.4 74.3 1978 378.8 407.1 74.4 1979 390.1 370.5 75.6 1980 391.8 362.7 75.8 1981 395.1 337.3 76.0 1982 397.8 299.5 75.6 1983 397.1 288.2 74.3 1984 403.1 296.1 74.6 1985 407.0 279.6 74.9 1986 418.0 277.9 75.7 1987 435.6 284.8 78.3 1988 442.8 288.0 79.0 1989 442.2 279.8 78.5 1990 448.8 261.6 79.3 1991 450.3 257.4 79.0 1992 458.2 242.4 80.1 1993 472.8 241.8 82.2 1994 488.6 247.6 84.1 1995 511.2 231.6 86.9 1996 534.8 234.5 90.1 1997 556.5 232.7 92.8 1998 565.8 229.3 93.2 1999 580.5 229.1 94.4 2000 584.9 217.6 93.8 2001 587.3 213.4 93.3 2002 600.1 212.1 94.1 2003 619.3 212.8 95.8 2004 638.6 213.6 97.1 2005 660.3 220.9 100.4 2006 $675.0 $225.8 $102.7 Sources: See Talberth, J; C. Cobb and N. Slattery, The Genuine Progress Indicator, 2006: ATool for Sustainable Development, Redefining Progress, Oakland, CA (www.rprogress.org), and authors' calculations. 41 N. Cost of Wetland Losses (Col. Q) Wetlands contain some of the most productive natural habitats in the world, but their benefits are not always considered in traditional economic accounts. Wetlands are a valuable resource that naturally filter chemical contaminants from our water and land and help control floods. They also nurture and sustain a vast array of bird, plant, aquatic and animal life, and because of this, damaging or eliminating them, would be devastating to the coastal ecosystem. Wetlands also provide recreational opportunities, aesthetic benefits, and sites for research and education, and support fisheries. Benefits derived from wetlands are indeed "public goods," for which there is no price valuation. As Talberth, Cobb, and Slattery (2006) have stated..., "when a farmer drains and fills a marsh, the GDP rises by the increased output of the farm. However, the loss of services from the wetland goes uncounted". The ISEW and GPI Accounts have attempted to rectify such an approach and/or estimation, by valuing their services, especially when wetland acreage is used for other purposes. Wetlands in Puerto Rico are diverse, ranging from interior mountainous wetlands of the rain forest to intertidal mangrove swamps along the coast. Puerto Rico's wetlands are valuable natural resources that provide habitat for wildlife and supply water for several large cities. Practically all of Puerto Rico's wetlands have been modified by human's activities. Wetland restoration efforts by local and federal agencies are underway at several locations throughout the Island. According to a Federal Agency study8, in 1974 Puerto Rico had 16,029 acres of wetland but this figure was 53% of their original acreage since the 20 th Century. By 1959, mangroves were restored to 18,000 acres at a rate of 108.5 acres per year, but between 1975 and 1987 the rate slowed to about 100 acres per year. However, x The Impact ofFederal Programs on Wetlands (hnp://www.dflLglJv/lJepdwellands2/v2ch 10. hlml). - Vol. II Puerto Rican Coast 42 given the conservation efforts, this rate was further reduced by 50 percent since year 2000. Following the estimating procedures perfomed by Talberth, Cobb, and Slattery (2006) and multiplying each acre of wetland loss by the price of $914 per acre (Woodward and Wui, 2000), the total loss per year, between 1970 and 2006, was estimated. These estimates were deflated using the implicit price index of PEC at year 2000 dollar value. Table 16 shows the cost of Wetland losses. The U.S. Censuses of Agriculture in Puerto Rico have shown that farmland has been decreasing rapidly since 1950 due to the urbanization and the process of industrial development. In 1950 farmland accounted for 1,844,886 cuerdas. 9 , whereas by 2002, it was drastically reduced to 609,687 cuerdas. This implies an annual rate of reduction of 22,200 acres per year. Table 17 shows the changes in farmland between 1969 and 2006 as well as the monetary value of the cost of farmland losses. 9 One cuerda equals 0.971212 acres. 43 Table 16 The Cost of Wetland Losses in Puerto Rico: Fiscal year 1970 to 2006. Fiscal Year Wetland Acres Losses Cumulated since 1959 up to 2006, by year ColQ. Wetland Losses (millions $; 2000 prices) 1970 3,255 $9.63 1971 3,364 $9.56 1972 3,472 $9.56 1973 3,581 $9.42 1974 3,689 $8.73 $7.83 1975 3,798 1976 3,906 $7.58 1977 4,015 $7.52 1978 4,123 $7.41 1979 4,232 $7.20 1980 4,340 $6.57 1981 4,449 $6.14 1982 4,557 $5.96 1983 4,666 $5.92 1984 4,774 $5.99 1985 4,883 $5.98 1986 4,991 $6.09 1987 5,100 $6.17 1988 5,200 $6.10 5,300 $6.00 1989 1990 5,400 $5.94 1991 5,500 $5.80 1992 5,600 $5.82 1993 5,700 $5.87 1994 5,800 $5.85 1995 5,900 $5.90 1996 6,000 $5.93 1997 6,100 $5.92 1998 6,200 $5.89 1999 6,300 $5.94 2000 6,400 $5.85 2001 6,450 $5.72 2002 6,550 $5.77 2003 6,650 $5.76 2004 6,750 $5.76 6,850 $5.66 6,950 $5.48 2005 2006 Sources: The Impact of Federal Programs on Wetlands' Vol. II Puerto Rican Coast (http://www.doi.gov/oepc/wetlands2lv2ch10.html). and Talberth, Cobb and Slattery (2006). 44 Table 17 Cost of Farmland Losses: 1969 to 2006. 2000 prices Fiscal Years Farmland in Puerto Rico (cuerdas) Changes in Farmland since 1950 (acres) Cumulated 1969 1,334,800 -494,783 $1,121.6 Col. R Cost of Farmland Losses (millions $) $554.9 1970 1,307,953 -520,825 $1,180.6 $614.9 1971 1,268,487 -559,107 $1,242.7 $694.8 1972 1,229,021 -597,389 $1,308.1 $781.5 $875.3 Price of Ecosystem Services (2000 prices) 1973 1,189,554 -635,672 $1,377.0 1974 1,150,088 -673,954 $1,449.5 $976.9 1975 1,110,622 -712,236 $1,525.7 $1,086.7 1976 1,071,155 -750,519 $1,606.0 $1,205.4 1977 1,031,689 -788,801 $1,690.6 $1,333.5 $1,493.6 1978 979,603 -839,325 $1,779.5 1979 980,317 -838,632 $1,873.2 $1,570.9 1980 981,030 -837,940 $1,971.8 $1,652.2 1981 981,744 -837,248 $2,075.6 $1,737.8 1982 982,457 -836,556 $2,184.8 $1,827.7 1983 963,335 -855,105 $2,299.8 $1,966.6 1984 944,213 -873,653 $2,420.8 $2,115.0 $2,273.6 1985 925,090 -892,202 $2,548.3 1986 905,968 -910,750 $2,682.4 $2,443.0 1987 886,846 -929,299 $2,823.6 $2,623.9 1988 874,855 -940,930 $2,972.2 $2,796.6 1989 862,865 -952,561 $3,128.6 $2,980.2 1990 850,874 -964,191 $3,293.3 $3,175.3 1991 838,884 -975,822 $3,466.6 $3,382.8 1992 826,893 -987,453 $3,649.0 $3,603.3 1993 833,324 -981,215 $3,841.1 $3,768.9 1994 839,755 -974,977 $4,043.3 $3,942.1 1995 846,186 -968,739 $4,256.1 $4,123.0 1996 852,616 -962,502 $4,480.1 $4,312.1 1997 859,047 -956,264 $4,715.9 $4,509.6 1998 865,478 -950,026 $4,964.1 $4,716.0 1999 821,780 -992,413 $5,225.3 $5,185.7 2000 778,083 -1,034,799 $5,500.3 $5,691.7 2001 734,385 -1,077,186 $5,775.4 $6,221.1 2002 690,687 -1,119,573 $6,064.1 $6,789.2 2003 646,989 -1,161,960 $6,367.3 $7,398.6 2004 603,292 -1,204,347 $6,685.7 $8,051.9 2005 559,594 -1,246,733 $7,020.0 $8,752.0 2006 515,896 -1,289,120 $7,371.0 $9,502.1 Sources: See Talberth, J; c. Cobb and N. Slattery (2006), Department of Agriculture, various years. 45 ~and u.S. Census of Agnculture, US O. Depletion of Non- Renewable Resources (Col. S) The depletion of non-renewable resources can be understood as an opportunity cost shifting from present to future generations. In the case of non-renewable natural capital, one has to note that it cannot be increased, but can only be diminished throughout time. Talberth, Cobb and Slattery (2006), have stated citing Herman Daly that rr••• our current accounting system counts this liquidation of natural capital wealth as income which is clearly wrong, because it is not a permanent or sustainable source of consumption" (Daly, 1996). Given the fact that Puerto Rico has never had oil, gas and coal extracting industries, the depletion of these non-renewable resources should not be taken into consideration for ISEW accounts. Notwithstanding, external costs generated by using petroleum, gas and coal, instead of other available renewable energy technologies, should be accounted. External costs are defined as those currently incurred in relation to health care and environment and due to electricity power plants. These costs are not included in the price of the energy produced; they are borne by groups of persons or by a society at large, generally without consent or due compensation. External costs should be an essential element in energy policy because, without them, the resulting mix of energy sources is unlikely to minimize the cost to society, nor is the distribution of costs and benefits. For the European Union (EU), the cost of electricity generation, without these external costs, averages about 4 cents/kWh, but when included, the price of electricity from coal doubles that of gas and increases to around 30%10. In order to calculate the external costs of using non- renewable energy sources as petroleum, gas and carbon instead of renewable energy source technologies, it 10 Bickel P. and Friedrich, R. (editors) 2005. Sustainable Energy Systems: ExternE: Externalitites of Energy, Methodology Update. University of Stuttgard, Germany (http://www.externe.infol) 46 is assumed that the percentage of non-renewable energy sources used· in the United States from 1980 to 2006, would be the opportunity cost for Puerto Rico, or the same as, the cost of unused renewable energy sources available in Puerto Rico. In addition, it is assumed that the external cost of this non-renewable source is 30% of the oil price (Texas Intermediated Price). On the basis of these assumptions and using the information given by the Energy Information Administration on the Total Primary Energy in BTUs in Puerto Rico, the equivalent consumption of oil in petroleum barrels (5.8 millions of BTUs = 1 barrel of oil) was calculated and then multiplied by 30% of the Texas Intermediated Price. Finally, the calculation estimates were deflated using the implicit price index of peE at year 2000 prices (Table 18). 47 Table 18 Cost of Using Non-Renewable Energy Sources. Millions 2000 prices. Fiscal Years Primary Energy Consumed Per capita (Million BTU) Petroleum Oil Barrel Equivalent 1970 111.8 52,257,397 0.0% 1971 113.9 54,143,834 0.0% 1972 116.1 56,078,443 0.0% 1973 118.2 58,062,304 0.0% 1974 120.3 60,096,518 0.0% 1975 122.5 62,182,209 0.0% 1976 124.6 64,320,523 0.0% 1977 126.8 66,512,634 0.0% 0.0% S Percentage of U.S. Renewable Sources from Total Energy Used External Cost = 30% x Texas Intermediated Price Total Cost of Using NonRenewable Energy Sources; 2000 prices 1978 128.9 68,759,736 1979 131.1 71,063,050 0.0% 1980 133.2 73,423,822 0.0% $12.46 $0.0 1981 139.0 77,411,293 0.0% $12.22 $0.0 1982 101.0 56,840,436 0.0% $11.21 $0.0 1983 96.7 55,028,206 0.0% $10.13 $0.0 1984 107.3 61,683,754 0.0% $9.76 $0.0 1985 91.9 53,420,347 0.0% $9.32 $0.0 1986 98.5 57,883,985 0.0% $5.01 $0.0 1987 101.5 60,288,834 7.4% $6.39 $37.8 1988 91.9 55,144,578 7.2% $5.33 $27.4 1989 88.8 53,883,467 7.4% $6.53 $32.3 1990 84.6 51,874,167 7.2% $8.17 $36.9 1991 104.4 64,457,513 7.3% $8.16 $44.1 1992 92.5 57,494,592 6.9% $6.85 $30.8 1993 96.1 60,115,136 7.0% $6.15 $29.3 1994 97.3 61,289,000 6.8% $5.73 $26.3 1995 99.0 62,827,333 7.3% $6.14 $30.9 1996 100.1 63,964,244 7.6% $7.38 $38.7 1997 102.5 65,903,865 7.5% $6.87 $35.9 1998 104.6 67,725,006 6.9% $4.80 $23.3 1999 107.4 70,018,481 6.8% $6.42 $31.6 $47.6 2000 115.4 75,756,196 6.2% $10.10 2001 124.6 82,472,433 5.5% $8.64 $38.2 2002 123.6 82,225,502 6.0% $8.70 $41.1 2003 133.4 89,213,430 6.2% $10.38 $54.3 2004 141.2 94,798,363 6.1% $13.81 $74.4 2005 2006 147.6 154.1 99,548,820 104,356,945 6.1% 6.1% $18.82 $22.03 $103.2 $120.9 Sources: Energy Information Administration, International Energy Annual 2004. (http://www .eia.doe.govIpub/international/iealfItableel c.xls) 48 P. Carbon Dioxide Emissions Damage (Col. T) Global Warming has created a strong link between Emissions of Carbon Dioxide (C0 2 ) and threats to the economic welfare such as property and lifestyle damages due to storms, floods, and droughts. These incidences have escalated the costs in the insurance due to payouts and the replacement losses on physical properties-buildings, livestock, and other household resources. The impact may ironically increase, at a given period of time, the value of the output and income, which would not necessarily lead to improvements on welfare. The cost for Puerto Rico was estimated by computing the ratio of U.S. cost due to carbon dioxide emissions damage to U.S. consumption (Talberth, Cobb, and Slattery, 2006). This ratio values for each year were applied to Puerto Rico PCE at 2000 prices. Since values for U.S. are already deflated to 2000 prices, we took the estimated values with no further price adjustments. Q. Cost of Ozone Depletion The cost of ozone depletion for Puerto Rico was estimated by applying the ratio of U.S. cost of ozone to U.S. consumption (Talberth, Cobb, and Slattery, 2006). The values of this ratio for each year were applied to Puerto Rico PCE at 2000 prices and did not required further price adjustments, since those values were computed by Talberth, Cobb, and Slaterry (2006) for year 2000 prices. Table 19 shows the figure cost values for carbon damages and ozone depletion. 49 Table 19 Cost of Carbon Dioxide Emissions and Ozone Depletion for Puerto Rico. Millions $ Fiscal Year 1970 to 2006 Fiscal Years Carbon dioxide Emissions (2000 prices) Ozone Depletion (2000 prices) 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 $47.7 $78.1 $115.6 $164.0 $215.2 $256.6 $331.9 $417.1 $502.0 $609.2 $709.1 $806.2 $893.0 $971.6 $1,081.8 $1,201.1 $1,340.0 $1,527.8 $1,706.0 $1,867.1 $2,062.9 $2,239.4 $2,458.1 $2,728.1 $3,012.4 $3,357.8 $3,748.0 $4,157.8 $4,477.4 $4,844.2 $5,147.3 $5,457.7 $5,855.7 $6,092.6 $6,309.7 $6,523.8 $6,669.4 $756.7 $884.4 $992.5 $1,106.2 $1,214.3 $1,243.2 $1,366.4 $1,468.6 $1,524.2 $1,595.1 $1,646.0 $1,703.0 $1,731.3 $1,747.4 $1,809.1 $1,863.8 $1,942.9 $2,065.0 $2,160.8 $2,204.9 $2,254.6 $2,266.7 $2,314.6 $2,383.6 $2,432.5 $2,499.1 $2,565.9 $2,615.7 $2,600.3 $2,607.7 $2,567.4 $2,528.8 $2,524.7 $2,544.4 $2,554.8 $2,641.5 $2,700.4 Sources: See Talberth, J; C. Cobb and N. Slattery (2006), 00 CIt.. 50 R. The Cost of Crime Crime is, so far, one of the main social problems currently facing the actual Puerto Rican society. In spite of ISEW accounts do not consider crime among their items, the GPI approach does. GPI includes the cost of crime. The conventional product and income figures considered crime cost as a contributor to economic growth and, in the absence of a clear-cut definition of welfare, anti-crime expenditures could be, indeed, interpreted as part of its well-being. Conversely, under the approaches of ISEW and GPI accounts, crime expenditures or income directly or indirectly derived from such activities are regarded as a liability rather than an asset. A lower level of crime might decrease the income level, but might increase the welfare of the society. Gross Product and Income Accounts were never designed to take into account the differences of those expenditures that contribute to societal well-being from those that detracts from societal well-being or "regrettable expenditures". It does not recognize the cost to society imposed by some sectors of the economy. On the other hand, GPI and ISEW approaches distinguish those "regrettable expenditures" from other types of expenditures and that those external costs impose a burden on the whole society. In order to measure the costs of crime, categories such as medical expenses, loss of productivity, and loss of property must be considered, which are relatively easy to estimate. Other psychological characteristics such as the trauma of being raped are more elusive to quantify and might implicitly appear in the form of lost opportunities or forgone activities. A full disclosure of the costs of crime is shown in Box 2. Four cost categories are considered: victim losses, public justice costs, private defensive expenditures of crime prevention/detection, and offenses to society. The crime index in Puerto Rico (Delitos Tipo 1-- divided by population level) is composed of the reported violent crime and property crime; then, the reported crime episodes are divided by 51 the population and finally multiplied by 10,000. Table 20 and Graph 2 presented the long run behavior of the crime index. This index accounts only for a number of reported episodes but excludes any monetary costs or values of stolen assets, productivity losses or spillovers. Box 2 Cost of Crime by Categories Victim Losses Direct losses due to Property Lost Production due to Absenteeism (omitted) Lost Income or productivity due to homicides (lucrus cesants) Lost Income due to death by blood alcohol content (BAC) 0.08% or over Domestic Disputes or Violence Public and Private Costs Police Expenditures Court and Legal Aids Corrections: provincial no federal Business Losses fraud, thefts and shoplifting Retail Business Defensive Costs (store surveillance, alarms, etc.) Home Security Systems Theft Insurances (premiums and claims) Offense to Society Drug trade and trafficking Money laundering (omitted) Illegal Gaming Illegal Selling of New Technological Products r'Piracy") 52 Table 20 Reported Crimes in Puerto Rico: Violent and Property: Per 10,000 inhabitants 1970 to 2006 YEAR 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 VIOLENT CRIME 14,327 15,749 15,355 15,640 15,429 16,606 16,597 16,835 15,150 15,355 16,853 16,321 15,167 15,559 17,410 22,492 26,097 23,616 22,526 21,853 29,912 28,145 32,286 26,342 25,400 22,450 20,147 19,595 16,439 14,206 12,406 11,403 13,471 11,885 10,062 9,579 8,929 PROPERTY CRIME 52,143 54,689 55,068 56,723 66,864 71,489 69,482 64,709 64,193 64,826 75,327 80,319 81,571 76,693 85,115 93,980 93,425 86,402 89,421 88,174 94,459 91,586 96,588 94,693 90,863 83,638 79,641 75,280 70,581 67,674 62,973 58,714 77,312 69,895 60,356 55,466 53,197 TOTAL CRIME 66,470 70,438 70,423 72,363 82,293 88,095 86,079 81,544 79,343 80,181 92,180 96,640 96,738 92,252 102,525 116,472 119,522 110,018 111,947 110,027 124,371 119,731 128,874 121,035 116,263 106,088 99,788 94,875 87,020 81,880 75,379 70,117 90,783 81,780 70,418 65,045 62,126 POPULATION 2,712,033 2,756,977 2,802,667 2,849,113 2,896,329 2,944,328 2,993,122 3,042,725 3,093,150 3,144,410 3,196,520 3,230,681 3,265,207 3,300,103 3,335,371 3,371,016 3,407,042 3,443,453 3,480,253 3,517,446 3,555,037 3,579,615 3,604,364 3,629,283 3,654,375 3,679,640 3,705,080 3,730,695 3,756,488 3,782,459 3,808,610 3,839,190 3,859,606 3,877,881 3,895,101 3,911,810 3,927,776 Source: Puerto Rico Police Department, and Commonwealth Planning Board 53 CRIME INDEX 245.1 255.5 251.3 254.0 284.1 299.2 287.6 268.0 256.5 255.0 288.4 299.1 296.3 279.5 307.4 345.5 350.8 319.5 321.7 312.8 349.8 334.5 357.5 333.5 318.1 288.3 269.3 254.3 231.7 216.5 197.9 182.6 235.2 210.9 180.8 166.3 158.2 Graph 2 Total Crime Index in Puerto Rico Year 1970 to 2006 400.0.-------------------------------------, 350.0 300.0 250.0 200.0 150.0 100.0 50.0 0.0 +-.,--,.....-,--r-..,........,..--.,...-..-...,-...,.-...--...--,.....-,r--r-..,........,..--.,...--r-...,-...,.-...--.,--,.....-,...--,.-..,........,..--.,...-..-...,--r--r-.....-,...-r-! 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 Source: Puerto Rico Police Department, and Commonwealth Planning Board 54 R.1 Victim Losses There are six main sub-categories in victim losses, ranging from property damages or losses to permanent income and/or productivity foregone by the individual and society. Direct losses due to property are valued using a study conducted by Brand and Price (2000). According to the authors, the average cost of crime per incident is a composed index which includes among others, the emotional and physical damage, insurance, loss of output, and health services (Table 21). "Average costs of crime vary widely between offence categories. The most costly property crimes are theft of vehicles, costing around 4,700 per incident. Burglaries cost an average of £2,300, and criminal damage around £500. Personal crimes are far more costly on average than property crimes. Homicides have been estimated to cost at least £1 million, with other violence against the person costing on average £19,000 per incident". "Robberies incur costs of almost £5,000 on average. Common assault is the least costly personal crime, with an average cost of around £500 per offence." (Brand and Price, 2000) Table 21 Parameters used to estimate the cost of crime Brand 8: Price Category Sexual Offenses Robbery (Theft) Aggravated assault Larceny-Burglary (in pound U.K.) a/ 13,220 2,906 246 1,384 Adjusted cost this study in US dollars and adjusted to PR per capita income relative to U.K. b/ $5,155 1,133 100 540 a/ included only cost in the category of "As a consequence of crime" , but excluding "loss of output". See Table 2 from Brand and Price (2000). b/1 U.K. pound = $1.56 (at 2000) Using the 2000 price costs of this study, but converting them to U.S. dollar value and adjusting the ratio of per capita income between U.K. and Puerto Rico 11, the economic cost of property and individual damages was estimated. These figures 11 The exchange rate in 2000 was 1 pound equaled $1.52 US dollar. Meanwhile, the per capita income of Puerto Rico was 60.8% of that of U.K. by 2006. 55 excluded murders and vehicles theft. For vehicle theft, the value of the -stolen vehicles and the foregone services derived from the vehicle were included. The average price of U.S. motor vehicles from 1999 to 2003 (Corrado, Dunn, and Oto, 2006) and an extrapolation using the annual average growth rate of 1.6% were used to value the stock of cars. A depreciation rate of 10% for one year and a flow of services of 20% per year were assumed. This rate seems to be high in comparison to other standards, since no mass transportation system is available in Puerto Rico. In turn, many workers have to drive their own cars in order to commute. Lastly, the estimated figures were deflated by the implicit price of consumer durable goods published by the PRPB. Finally, the value of productivity losses for murders as well as that for a person's death, caused by driving cars with blood alcohol content (BAC) of 0.08% or more was estimated. The average age of a murdered or drunk- driving victim is assumed at 39 years for all years. Thereby, the year losses are 26 years (65 years old minus 39 years). The discount rate is 6% (legal actuarial rate of interest applied in Puerto Rico's personal damages) and the probability of being employed is 0.685. The average wage was deflated by the implicit price of consumer goods published by the PRPB. R.1.a Domestic Disputes Other victim losses are those caused by domestic disputes or violence. Basic information data came from http://www.tendendaspr.com. 12 The number of incidents extends from 1988 to 2006. In the Trauma Center of Medical Hospital of Puerto Rico each violence episode for any intermediated outpatient costs $1,000 to $1,200 per day (2005 prices). The yearly rate of change was taken from the Consumer Price Index of Medical Services (1984=100) published by the Department of Labor and Human Resources. The data were converted to 2000 price base. Table 22 portrays the cost estimation for domestic disputes. 12 Cited by the Division of Statistics, Police Department of Puerto Rico. 56 Table 22 Costs of Domestic Violence at 2000 prices. Millions Year S 1988 1989 1990 Domestic Violence (incidents) 9,260 2,017 13,528 Cost per day / per episode (at 2000 prices) $575 $590 $605 Cost of Domestic Dispute (millions $) $5.33 $1.19 $8.19 1991 13,410 $687 $9.21 1992 14,642 $750 $10.99 1993 17,873 $759 $13.57 1994 18,079 $777 $14.04 1995 19,411 $803 $15.59 1996 19,132 $838 $16.03 1997 21,217 $866 $18.37 1998 21,084 $882 $18.60 1999 20,200 $926 $18. 70 2000 18,271 $947 $17.31 2001 17,770 $967 $17.18 2002 20,075 $996 $19.99 2003 21,164 $1,034 $21.89 2004 22,274 $1,078 $24.02 2005 22,718 $1,100 $24.99 2006 20,965 $1,137 $23.83 Sources: http://www.tendenClaspr.com; Puerto RlCO PollCe Department and calculatlOns by the authors. R.2 Public and Private Cost of Justice The costs of public justice were taken from the annual Budget of the Commonwealth Budget of Puerto Rico, for the years 1996 to 2006. The following agencies are related to public justice: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Departamento de Justicia (Department of Justice) Junta de Libertad bajo Palabra (Borrad of Conditional Liberty) Tribunal General de Justicia (General Court of Justice) Policia de Puerto Rico (Department of Police, Puerto Rico) Administracion de Instituciones Juveniles (Juvenile Institutions Administration). 6. Oficina del Fiscal Especial Independiente (Independent Special Prosecutor's Office). 7. Sistema de Correcion (Correctional System). 8. Oficina con Antelacion al Juicio (Pre-trial Services Office). 57 The annual expenditures for years beyond the 1996 to 2006 are extrapolated by the annual average growth rate of per capita expenditures of 6.3%. R.3. Private Defensive Expenditures of Crime losses, Prevention/Detection R.3.a. Retail losses due to fraud, theft and shoplifting The National Retail Federation estimated that shoplifting cost to retailers around $10.23 billion in 2001, up from $8.45 billion in 2000. Even though retailers continue to invest in new programs and technology to combat crime in their stores, dollar losses from theft and fraud are still at an all-time high. The latest National Retail Security Survey (Hollinger, 2007) found that retail shrunk an average of 1.61 percent of retail sales in 2006. According to this survey, the majority of retail shrinkage last year was due to employee theft, reaching $19.5 billion, of which almost half (47%) were losses. Shoplifting accounted for $13.3 billion, or about one-third (32%) of losses. Other losses included administrative errors ($5.8 billion and 14% of shrinkage) and vendor fraud ($1.7 billion and 4% of shrinkage). In order to estimate local cost figures on this subject, the following procedures were established: (a) Estimate a time-series of retail sales from 1970 to 2006. A new figure was published by the local Department of Trade and Export since 2004. (b) Old series of retail sales went from 1991 to 2006. It was found that the new series is 1.80 the old series (year 2004 and 2005), so, the new series for years 1991 to 2003 was estimated, using this parameter value. 58 (c) In order to estimate the retail sales figures from 1970 to 199·0, the annual rate of change of the new retail sales per capita (4.09%) was forecasted. (d) The per capita sales for years 1970 to 1990 was multiplied by the population size to derive the retail sales for these years. (e) Retail losses due to fraud, theft and shoplifting were assumed at 1.6% of total retail sales. (f) Finally, the figure was deflated by the implicit price deflator for personal consumer expenditures at 2000 prices. R.3.b. Home and Business Expenditures in Security Systems A higher level of crime also leads to an increase in either family or business expenditures in security systems, devices, software, and equipment. For instance, in 1996, Americans installed 23.8 million alarms, in which 55 %were residential. A Survey from Park Associates 13 found that the number of American homes with security systems increased from 7% in 1988 to 22.3% in 2005. The following procedure was assumed to estimate the expenditures on residential and business security systems: (a) The number of families was estimated by dividing total population by 3.2 members per family; (b) The same percentage of United States families buying security systems was assumed; (c) The cost of a security system was $150 per family in 2000, and adjusted at an inflation rate of 5%. For business expenditures, we have the following assumptions: (a) The number of establishments was set to 53,418 in 2004; the rate of growth is 1% per year. 13 Parks Associates, Home Security Update, 2Q 2005. (www.parksassociates.com) 59 (b) The rate of businesses with security systems is three times that of families. (c) The cost per business was $1,500 at 2000, and the rate of inflation was set as 5% per year. (d) Finally the total cost is the sum of household expenditures as well as that of businesses, deflated to year 2000 prices. R.3.c. Private Security Guards and Private Investigators The social cost of private security guards and investigators was estimated using the County Business Patterns published by the U.S. Census Bureau. 14 The basic figure was payroll payments of industrial sectors providing security services. Figures from 1970 to 1992 were estimated by extrapolating backward the figure of 1992, at an annual rate of change of 8% (average rate of growth from 1992 to 2004). These figures were deflated by the implicit price for personal consumption of services at 2000 prices. R.3.d. Burglary and Theft: premiums and losses paid Total written premiums and losses paid by insurers due to burglary and theft are also considered a cost of crime. Data from 1997 to 2005 was obtained from the Office of the Commissioner of Insurance. Data for other years were calculated by extrapolating the average per capita value of $0.46 per person, and then deflated by the implicit price index of PCE at 2000 prices. R.4. Offense to Society R.4.a. Drug trade and trafficking One of the most seizure markets in the economy of Puerto Rico is the illegal drug trade. Drug smuggling, trafficking, and violence-- as a by-product --are conducted mainly in the "drug trading-spots".15 There is no doubt that Puerto Rico is still being used as a transshipment port for illegal drugs, primarily to the 14 Reports from 1992 to 2004 for Puerto Rico are available on the Web page of the U.S. Census (http://www.census.gov/epcd/cbp/download/cbpdownload.html). 15 In Spanish "puntos de droga". 60 United States. The value of traded cocaine once reached high of $20 billion in 2000, of which $4 billion were consumed locally, and the remainder of $16 billion was re-exported. On the basis of a 1997 Congressional Testimony of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) by Thomas A. Constantine 16 , it was stated: rrPuerto Rico's 300-mile coastline, the vast number of isolated cays and 6 million square miles of open water between the U.S. and Colombia, make the region difficult to patrol and make it ideal for land, sea and air smuggling of drugs, weapons, illegal aliens and currency. Puerto Rico is also a significant air and sea transportation port in the Caribbean for travelers destined for the United States. It has the third busiest seaport in North America and the 14th busiest in the world. More than 75 daily commercial flights arrive in the Continental United States from Puerto Rico and it is also a major port for commercial maritime shopping. The traffickers' biggest asset is the sheer volume of the commercial trade." "Today, cocaine and heroin traffickers from Colombia have transformed Puerto Rico into the largest staging area in the Caribbean for smuggling Colombian cocaine and heroin into the U. S. The municipalities in the central mountain range and the south coast provide the bases of operation for the command and control functions of the Colombian syndicates". A 2000 DEA Testimony to the U.S. Congress by Robert Vigil reaffirmed: " More than ever, international drug trafficking organizations utilize Puerto Rico as a major point of entry for the transshipment of multi-ton quantities of cocaine being smuggled into the United States. Puerto Rico has become known as a gateway for drugs destined for cities on the East Coast of the United States. " According to a local newspaper article 17 , about 1,500 rrillegal drug trading spots" operate in Puerto Rico. In one hundred (100) trading spots located in six housing projects 18 in the San Juan metropolitan area, the sales per spot reached $703,000 weekly. In order to estimate the illegal drug sales, it was assumed that all trade-spot sales were at 90% of this amount, with an annual inflation rate of Puerto Rico and Law Enforcement Efforts in the Caribbean Region. (http://www.usdoi.gov/dea/pubs/cngrtestlct970403.htm 17 Hernandez Alejandra, Llueve dinero en puntos de droga de PR: Millonarias las ganancias anuales; .§ Nuevo Dia; 14 de septiembre de 2006. 18 In Spanish housing projects are called as caserios. 16 61 5%. The estimated sales are finally deflated by the implicit price indeX' of personal consumption expenditures at a 2000 price base. R.4.b. Illegal Gaming In 2006, legal gaming in Puerto Rico was about $4.3 billion; $272 million (6.3%) in legal lotteries (Pega 2; Pega 3; Pega 4; La Revancha; Lotto, and traditional lottery); $3.0 billion (69%) in Casinos and Slot machines; and $1.0 billion (23%) in horse-racing and cockfights. According to the local state police, illegal gaming is composed by "la bolita" (illegal lottery) and a similar amount of legal lotteries is devoted to illegal bets. In 2006, "la bolita" amounted to $300 million, while illegal bets reached $200 million, for a total sum of $500 million. To calculate the year to year figure, an inflation rate of 5% was assumed, and then deflated by the implicit price index of personal consumption at 2000 prices. R.4.c. Illegal Selling of New Technological Products C'Piracy"). The era of information technology has transformed many industrial societies as well as economic sectors, but at the same time created new waves of racketeering or underground sales. The infringement copyright material, violation of property rights by selling DVDs, music and movies illegally; CD's; software; devices; and taking illegal signals from Cable Channels are well-know. A study by the Business Software Alliance 19 found that a decrease of 10 points in the piracy rate (lowering from a rate of 46% to 36%); will increase the legal sales from $575 million to $850 million. This means a total market size of $1,065 million, of which the illegal segment is close to $490 million. No information about market size from other illegal trade sales is known. A good guess is that illegal trade of new technological products is about $245 million or half of the illegal segment. This figure was increased at an inflation rate of 5% each year, and then, deflated by the implicit price index of personal consumption at 2000 prices. Since this type of crime is a by-product of the new technological-digital wave, the estimates were considered 19 See http://www.bsa.org/idcstudy/pdfs/Puerto_Rico_Spanish.pdf 62 from 1995 to 2006. From 1990 to 1995, this cost was assumed to be half' of the forecasted figures. R.5 Total Cost of Crime. Given the previous cost items, the sum will be considered as the total cost of crime. Table 23 and Graph 3 depict the total cost of crime from fiscal years 1970 to 2006. By 2006, for instance, the total cost of crime amounted $4,147 millions, while $3,435 millions by 1996. This means an annual rate of growth of 1.9% Table 23 The Total Cost of Crime at 2000 Prices. Millions $ Fiscal Years 1970 to 2006 Fiscal Years Total Cost of Cri me (Millions $; 2000 prices) Fiscal Years 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 $1,976.8 $2,148.8 $2,345.2 $2,526.4 $2,527.2 $2,337.2 $2,255.4 $2,265.5 $2,304.2 $2,301.5 $2,198.9 $2,211.2 $2,179.9 $2,144.8 $2,313.6 $2,491.0 $2,735.1 $2,614.0 $2,712.4 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Source: this study. For a full disclosure of cost items see Appendix B. I II! ,'I ' I 63 Total Cost of Crime (Millions $; 2000 prices) $2,620.2 $2,846.0 $2,964.0 $3,090.2 $3,207.8 $3,320.4 $3,342.3 $3,434.7 $3,626.4 $3,641.0 $3,698.1 $3,679.5 $3,790.5 $3,861.9 $3,945.8 $4,014.0 $4,223.6 $4,147.6 Graph 3 Total Cost of Crime at 2000 prices Fiscal Years 1970 to 2006 $4,500.0 -r-----------------------------------, $4,000.0 y = 59.926x + 1781.5 R2 = 0.8857 $3,500.0 $3,000.0 $2,500.0 $2,000.0 $1,500.0 $1,000.0 $500.0 Source: Table 23 64 III. Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW). This section shows the results of the modified ISEW for Puerto Rico, which incorporates the cost of crime. In 2000 the ISEW per capita amounted $3,653, which is the highest benchmark ever reached since 1970. In 2006, the ISEW per capita reached $2,509, which represented a value loss of $1,144 per person or a negative annual rate of growth of -6.7%. As can be seen at Table 24, Columns 1 and 2, the cost items have growing faster than PCE plus positive items (Col 1). From 2000 to 2006, Col.1 grew at 6.3% while Col. 2 did so at 25%. On the other hand, the cost of crime has rocketed since the inception of the 2000 decade. In 2004, the cost of crime reached a record value of $4,014 million, about 32% of total ISEW; and about 42% by 2006 (See Table 25). Crime is an industry accounting for big businesses which contribute, at least, indirectly to GDP and income figures. Despite of this high level of crime, which implies a huge amount of underground income circulating into the economy, this condition cannot be understood automatically as an increase of the economic welfare of local residents. Crime is a cost to the economy rather than a social benefit. Finally, Table 26 and Graph 4 compare the ISEW per capita and the GNP per capita, both at 2000 prices. Graph 5 portrays the annual rate of growth of both series. The real GNP per capita figure depicts a constant increase since 1982, but the ISEW per capita showed a downward trend. By the mid 1980's, the value of ISEW was nearly half of the real GNP per capita, but in the 2000's, it represented a quarter of real GNP per capita. 65 Table 24 Index of Sustainability and Economic Welfare for Puerto Rico: 1970 to 2006. 2000 prices Fiscal Year Col. 1 PCE+ Adding Items (millions $) Col. 2 Minus: Cost Items (millions $) Col. 3 = Col. 1 minus Col. 2 ISEW (millions $) Col. 4 Population Col. 5 = Col. 3 + Col. 4 ISEW per capita 1970 $16,114.6 $7,304.0 $8,810.6 2,712,033 $3,249 1971 $17,492.5 $8,025.2 $9,467.2 2,756,977 $3,434 1972 $18,509.7 $8,670.5 $9,839.1 2,802,667 $3,511 1973 $19,901.0 $9,313.5 $10,587.5 2,849,113 $3,716 1974 $19,696.5 $9,266.2 $10,430.3 $3,601 1975 $19,951.5 $8,951.6 $11,000.0 2,896,329 2,944,328 1976 $20,722.9 $9,415.3 $11,307.6 2,993,122 $3,778 1977 $21,443.2 $9,976.1 $11,467.1 3,042,725 $3,769 1978 $22,023.0 $10,587.6 $11,435.4 3,093,150 $3,697 1979 $23,136.8 $22,821.4 $10,970.5 $10,741.2 $12,166.2 3,144,410 $3,869 1980 $12,080.2 3,196,520 $3,779 1981 $22,674.1 $10,916.0 $11,758.1 3,230,681 $3,640 1982 $23,014.2 $10,705.0 $12,309.2 3,265,207 $3,770 1983 $23,558.9 $10,950.5 $12,608.4 3,300,103 $3,821 1984 $24,328.3 $11,880.5 $12,447.8 3,335,371 $3,732 1985 $25,259.4 $12,730.6 $12,528.8 3,371,016 $3,717 1986 $25,983.5 $13,513.3 $12,470.2 3,407,042 $3,660 1987 $26,678.3 $14,173.5 $12,504.8 3,443,453 $3,631 1988 $27,599.9 $14,838.3 $12,761.7 3,480,253 $3,667 1989 $27,599.4 $15,136.5 $12,462.9 3,517,446 $3,543 1990 $29,015.4 $15,892.9 $13,122.4 3,555,037 $3,691 1991 $28,692.5 $16,038.0 $12,654.6 3,579,615 $3,535 1992 $28,923.7 $16,848.0 $12,075.8 3,604,364 $3,350 $3,446 $3,736 1993 $30,546.7 $18,041.9 $12,504.8 3,629,283 1994 $31,907.2 $19,104.0 $12,803.1 3,654,375 $3,504 1995 $32,906.8 $20,281.4 $12,625.4 3,679,640 $3,431 1996 $34,234.3 $21,328.5 $12,905.9 3,705,080 $3,483 1997 $35,474.2 $22,743.0 $12,731.3 3,730,695 $3,413 1998 $36,289.2 $23,655.8 $12,633.5 3,756,488 $3,363 1999 $37,789.5 $25,159.0 $12,630.5 3,782,459 $3,339 2000 $39,497.6 $25,583.9 $13,913.7 3,808,610 $3,653 2001 $39,818.4 $26,195.4 $13,623.1 3,839,190 $3,548 2002 $40,073.0 $27,220.9 $12,852.0 3,859,606 $3,330 2003 $40,754.6 $28,099.3 $12,655.3 3,877,881 $3,263 2004 $41,984.0 $29,275.9 $12,708.2 3,895,101 $3,263 2005 $42,345.6 $31,252.7 $11,092.8 3,911,810 $2,836 2006 $42,076.9 3,927,776 $2,509 $32,220.9 $9,856.1 Sources: U.S. Census of PopulatlOn (http://WWW/1P.goblerno.pr) and calculatlOn from thIs study. 66 Table 25 Index of Sustainability and Economic Welfare and the Cost of Crime: 1970 to 2006 Fiscal Years Cost of Crime (Millions $) $1,976.8 $2,148.8 Ratio of Cost of Crime to ISEW 22.4% 22.7% 1971 ISEW (millions $) $8,810.6 $9,467.2 1972 1973 1974 $9,839.1 $2,345.2 23.8% $10,587.5 $10,430.3 $2,526.4 $2,527.2 23.9% 24.2% 1970 1975 $11,000.0 $2,337.2 21.2% 1976 $11,307.6 $2,255.4 19.9% 1977 1978 1979 $11,467.1 $11,435.4 $12,166.2 $2,265.5 $2,304.2 $2,301.5 19.8% 20.1% 18.9% 1980 1981 $12,080.2 $11,758.1 $2,198.9 18.2% $2,211.2 18.8% 1982 1983 $12,309.2 $12,608.4 $2,179.9 17.7% 17.0% 1984 1985 $12,447.8 1986 1987 1988 1989 $2,144.8 $2,313.6 $12,528.8 $12,470.2 $2,491.0 $12,504.8 $12,761.7 $2,614.0 $2,712.4 $12,462.9 $2,735.1 18.6% 19.9% 21.9% 20.9% 21.3% 21.0% 1990 1991 $13,122.4 $2,620.2 $2,846.0 $12,654.6 $2,964.0 23.4% 1992 1993 $12,075.8 $12,504.8 $3,090.2 $3,207.8 25.6% 1994 $12,803.1 1995 $12,625.4 $3,320.4 $3,342.3 25.9% 26.5% 1996 1997 $12,905.9 $12,731.3 $3,434.7 $3,626.4 26.6% 28.5% 1998 $12,633.5 $12,630.5 $13,913.7 $3,641.0 28.8% 1999 2000 $3,698.1 $3,679.5 2001 $13,623.1 $3,790.5 26.4% 27.8% 2002 2003 $12,852.0 $3,861.9 $3,945.8 30.0% 31.2% $4,014.0 31.6% 21.7% 25.7% 29.3% 2004 $12,655.3 $12,708.2 2005 $11,092.8 $4,223.6 38.1% 2006 $9,856.1 $4,147.6 42.1% Source: thIs study 67 Table 26 ISEW and real GNP per capita in Puerto Rico: 1970 to 2006 Year ISEW per capita; 2000 prices GNP real 2000 prices 1970 $3,249 $6,832 1971 $3,434 $7,145 1972 $3,511 $7,323 1973 $3,716 $7,566 1974 $3,601 $7,636 1975 $3,736 $7,406 1976 $3,778 $7,400 1977 $3,769 $7,521 1978 $3,697 $7,719 1979 $3,869 $8,026 1980 $3,779 $8,032 1981 $3,640 $8,006 1982 $3,770 $7,694 1983 $3,821 $7,419 1984 $3,732 $7,630 1985 $3,717 $7,796 1986 $3,660 $8,000 1987 $3,631 $8,268 1988 $3,667 $8,568 1989 $3,543 $8,822 1990 $3,691 $8,962 1991 $3,535 $8,976 1992 $3,350 $8,979 1993 $3,446 $9,181 1994 $3,504 $9,277 1995 $3,431 $9,471 1996 $3,483 $9,864 1997 $3,413 $10,006 1998 $3,363 $10,253 1999 $3,339 $10,612 2000 $3,653 $10,877 2001 $3,548 $10,984 2002 $3,330 $10,885 2003 $3,263 $11,062 2004 $11,312 $3,263 2005 $2,836 $11,481 2006 $2,509 $11,508 Source: thIs study and Commonwealth Planmng Board 68 Annual rate of growth ISEW per capita GNP per capita 5.7% 2.2% 5.9% -3.1% 3.7% 1.1% -0.2% -1.9% 4.7% -2.3% -3.7% 3.6% 1.3% -2.3% -0.4% -1.5% -0.8% 1.0% -3.4% 4.2% -4.2% -5.2% 2.8% 1.7% -2.1% 1.5% -2.0% -1.4% -0.7% 9.4% -2.9% -6.2% -2.0% 0.0% -13.1% -11.5% 4.6% 2.5% 3.3% 0.9% -3.0% -0.1% 1.6% 2.6% 4.0% 0.1% -0.3% -3.9% -3.6% 2.8% 2.2% 2.6% 3.4% 3.6% 3.0% 1.6% 0.2% 0.0% 2.3% 1.0% 2.1% 4.2% 1.4% 2.5% 3.5% 2.5% 1.0% -0.9% 1.6% 2.3% 1.5% 0.2% Graph 4 ISEW per capita and GNP per capita (2000 prices) Index (1970 =100) 1.8000.,.-----------------------------.., 1.6000 - - - - - - - - - - 1.4000 +--------------------~'-----------___j 1.2000 +-----------..:------~----------------1 1.0000 0.8000 +----------------------------~ -ISEW per capita -GNP real per capita: 2000 prices 0.6000 + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ j 0.4000 0.2000 + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - j 0.0000 +-r--r-,-...,.-,......,.--,-...,-.,--,__;_-,-_,__,..__r--,-~.,.___,__;__r__,__,..__r_,_~.,.___,__,_...,.__r_r_r_,_~,...._! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~*~~~~~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,~ ,,<:15 ,,<:15 ,,<:15 ,,<:15 ,,<:15 ~ 'l,(S ~ ~ ,,~ Source: Table 26 69 Graph 5 Rate of Growth ISEW per capita and GNP per capita 15.0% , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , 10.0% + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 5.0% + - \ - 1 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - - 1 - - - - - - 1 -5.0% 4 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 3 1 1 - - - - - - - - - \ - 1 - - - - 1 - - - - 1 --ISEW per capita - - Rate of Growth GNP real per capita -10.0% + - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - - - - 1 -15.0% .L- ----J Source: Table 26. 70 References Arrow, Kenneth, et al. 1995. 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Case study on the use of genuine progress indicator to measure urban economic welfare in China. Ecological Economics. Vol. 63. pages 463-465. 74 APPENDIX A GRAPHS ISEW AND GOP International Comparison Sources Castaneda, Beatriz E. 1999. An index of sustainable economic welfare (ISEW) for Chile. Ecological Economics. Vol. 28. Pages: 231-244. Clark, Matthew and Sardar M. N. Islam. 2005. Diminishing and negative welfare returns of economic growth: an index of sustainable economic welfare (ISEW) for Thailand. Ecological Economics. Vol. 54. Pages: 81-93. Jackson, Tim and Nat McBride. 2005. Measuring Progress? A review of 'adjusted' measures of economic welfare in Europe. Center for Environmental Strategy. University of Surrey, United Kingdom. http://www.belsPo.be/frdocfdd/nl/Pubnllsympnlls2006prospnllMeasuring%20Progress%20f inal.pdf 75 Graph A-1 ISEW and GOP for Chile 1,000,000 .r---- 900,000 J I 800,000 700,000 .. 600,000 500,000 300,000 200,000 . 100,000 o· 1965 1970 1980 1975 1985 1990 1995 Yea,. I~GDf>/per capita i I '~.ISEW~!':(~.t:;.<1I~..i . - I.SEW /. per capita 1 Fig, 7. The impact of intenlittional position on the ISE\V (lSE\V-IP) for Chile. 1965····1995, Source: Castaneda (1999). 76 Graph A-2 ISEW Components for Chile Positive contributions 9,000 Defensive costs and Environmental degradation 8.000 7,000 § 8- 6.000 0 0) ~ 5.000 .~ i 4.000 3,000 Long-term environmental costs 2.000 ISEW 1.000 0 1965 1970 1975 1980 Year 1985 1990 1995 Source: Castaneda (1999). Graph A-3 ISEW and GOP per capita for Thailand (1988 prices) 60000.------ _ 50000+---, 40ooo-+---------- ---:7"F""-- ...... 30000+---------_ _ • ~- _ ...-_ ".... _ -_ . ._. . _ _- ...._-..-....-.--,--=:,"" .. -".-.-.~..-..'='""'--=_ 10000+-----.. -;,.--:=--='-''''"'''--' -;:7-",=-...- ......-......•..... 20000+----._,..... -=•.-...--...;:-."" ....- ''"""-"'''''"-'= •........•. -.. ...... - ,W .. ...- ~.-.---• • - . .> •.• = y._-..- _ ••. - . . - . - •.~ y ••- . . . . . . _ . , ' . . . - O-f--r~.----r--r~.----,--r-.----r--r~.----,--r~c---r----,---._-r----,---,c---r----,---._-r---, ,~"=>,~<o$'''' ,<~}'b,,~"1>,o,<§>,,"1>9:>" ~#-,,""""\o,'tl",0,4'~#,0,.[;-,,<§'J>,0,9:>0,"o,<:§>"o,'C!>""o,q,'l-"o,o,",,"1>"!1'"-,q,o,"=>"q,<:!P.f;;¢ ,0,<:!P"o,<f!' ---ISEVV per capita (1988 prices) - ..- GOP per capita ClS/8S prices) Source: Clarke and Islam (2005). 77 Graph A-4 ISEW and GOP per capita in Austria Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GOP per capita in Austria 19551992. Graph A-5 ISEW and GOP per capita in United States Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GOP per capita in the United States; 78 1950-1990. Graph A-6 GPI and GOP per capita in United States Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). Figure 14. GPI and GDP per capita in the United States. Graph A-7 ISEW and GOP in Chile Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GDP per capita in Chile 1965-1995. 79 Graph A-8 ISEW versus GOP per capita in Germany Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GOP per capita in Germany 1950-1990. Graph A-9 ISEW versus GOP per capita in Italy Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GOP per capita in Italy 1960·1990. 80 Graph A-10 ISEW versus GOP per capita in Scotland Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GDP per capita in Scotland: 1984·1990. Graph A-11 ISEW versus GOP per capita in Sweden Sourcc: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). (SEW versus GDP pcr capita in Sweden 1950- 1992. 81 Graph A-12 ISEW versus GOP per capita in United Kingdom Source: (Jackson and McBride, 2005). ISEW versus GDP per capita in UK 1950-2000. 82 APPENDIX B Table B-1 Total Cost of Crime at 2000 prices: Fiscal Years 1970 to 2006 If Domestic Violence Drug trade Points Sales Illegal Gaming Piracy Total Cost Crime 2000 prices 0 2000 prices $484.6 2000 prices $257.7 2000 prices $0.0 2000 prices $1,976.8 $2,148.8 1970 264.4 Present Value (6%) $139.5 $398.6 2000 prices $277.1 $0.12 $50.8 Burglary and Theft; premiums writtens and losses paid 2000 prices $4.5 1971 317.4 $205.1 $116.0 $418.5 $282.5 $0.44 $53.4 $4.4 0 $490.3 $260.8 $0.0 1972 424.9 $230.3 $124.6 $447.4 $290.3 $0.46 $57.2 $4.5 0 $499.8 $265.8 $0.0 $2,345.2 1973 503.2 $302.4 $123.3 $469.2 $293.9 $0.48 $59.6 $4.3 0 $502.6 $267.3 $0.0 $2,526.4 Years Stolen property and damages, 2000 prices Foregone productivity Foregone productivity (PV=6%) Court Justice System Retail Losses thefts, fraud and shoplifting Expenditures families and business in alarms system Private Security Guards and Private Investigators death by BAC =.08 > $99.5 2000 prices 2000 prices 2000 prices 1974 501.5 $369.8 $119.5 $462.5 $280.3 $0.49 $60.5 $4.1 0 $475.6 $252.9 $0.0 $2,527.2 1975 397.5 $366.1 $140.4 $443.0 $259.0 $0.47 $58.5 $3.7 0 $436.4 $232.1 $0.0 $2,337.2 1976 341.2 $308.3 $161.9 $459.5 $258.4 $0.47 $59.6 $3.5 $432.5 $230.1 $0.0 $2,255.4 1977 303.6 $319.4 $150.9 $488.0 $264.8 $0.48 $61.6 S3.4 ·0 0 $439.6 $233.8 SO.O $2,265.5 1978 315.9 $326.2 $140.7 $505.2 $269.4 $0.49 $63.7 $3.3 0 $443.5 $235.9 $0.0 $2,304.2 1979 331.8 $315.0 $156.2 S479.7 $270.5 $0.48 $66.5 $3.2 0 $442.7 $235.4 $0.0 $2,301.5 1980 300.5 $306.5 $174.0 $462.0 $255.3 $0.47 $64.3 $2.9 0 $413.2 $219.7 $0.0 $2,198.9 1981 316.3 $331.8 $188.4 $455.7 $245.2 $0.45 $62.0 $2.6 0 $397.4 $211.4 $0.0 $2,211.2 1982 340.3 $300.6 $172.4 $448.2 $244.9 $0.47 $63.5 $2.5 0 $396.3 $210.8 $0.0 $2,179.9 1983 336.5 $253.9 $144.0 $471.7 $250.5 $0.49 $65.3 $2.4 0 $404.7 $215.3 $0.0 $2,144.8 1984 390.7 $284.0 $145.4 $512.8 $261.5 $1.14 $69.6 $2.3 0 $421.8 $224.3 $0.0 $2,313.6 1985 461.7 $328.0 $143.9 $547.3 $269.1 $1.20 $73.7 $2.3 0 $433.3 $230.5 $0.0 $2,491.0 1986 523.4 $401.3 $161.9 $586.8 $282.6 $1.26 $79.3 $2.3 0 $454.4 $241.7 $0.0 $2,735.1 1987 450.1 $277.3 $149.6 $626.1 $295.5 $1.34 $85.3 $2.3 0 $474.3 $252.3 $0.0 $2,614.0 ii,' .. t b <\'M'#We¥W·«(!f"#W.wW'ig"4#WiM,iiIM'W",r:;t,pe, n'T:"'?r":;'" !Wf% " I ' ttrtrr""",,.rmr&~. ...............Continuation Table B-1 Stolen property and damages, Foregone productivity Foregone productivity (PV=6%) Court Justice System 1988 451.6 $317.0 $149.1 $653.1 $302.0 $1.41 $89.2 $5.3 $484.0 $257.4 $0.0 1989 403.6 $242.5 $135.5 $680.0 $307.4 $1.68 $92.8 $2.1 $1.2 $491.8 $261.6 $0.0 $2,620.2 1990 514.8 $303.5 $126.5 $709.8 $314.7 $1.86 $94.6 $2.0 $8.2 $502.7 $267.4 $80.9 $2,846.0 2000 prices Retail Losses thefts, fraud and shoplifting Expenditures families and business in alarms system Burglary and Theft; premiums writtens and losses paid $2.2 Years Private Security Guards and Private Investigators Domestic Violence Drug trade Points Sales Illegal Gaming Piracy Total Cost Crime; 2000 prices Millions $ $2,712.4 1991 489.4 $402.0 $135.5 $731.5 $316.7 $1.91 $99.3 $2.0 $9.2 $506.9 $269.6 $170.3 $2,964.0 1992 506.8 $413.4 $138.6 $776.2 $327.9 $2.07 $106.0 $1.9 $11.0 $526.3 $279.9 $179.2 $3,090.2 1993 473.0 $445.7 $143.1 $826.8 $347.8 $1.77 $113.9 $1.9 $13.6 $548.6 $291.8 5188.7 $3,207.8 1994 474.0 $458.6 $145.4 $872.5 $360.2 $1.85 $124.3 $1.9 $14.0 $566.4 $301.3 $198.6 $3,320.4 $3,342.3 1995 438.9 $406.3 $149.5 $929.9 $358.8 $1.98 $134.6 $1.9 $15.6 $590.7 $314.2 $198.6 1996 446.0 $393.7 $122.4 $989.2 $373.9 $2.07 $147.8 $1.9 $16.0 $614.9 $327.0 $440.1 $3,434.7 1997 434.9 $362.5 $126.6 $1,160.1 $385.5 $2.70 $160.6 $2.2 $18.4 $635.1 $337.8 $463.2 $3,626.4 1998 426.3 $337.0 $130.6 $1,144.7 $401.0 $2.80 $174.9 $1.8 $18.6 $655.0 $348.3 $487.6 $3,641.0 1999 411.4 $272.4 $126.9 $1,219.1 $408.5 $3.05 $189.5 $1.8 $18.7 $683.4 $363.4 $513.3 $3,698.1 2000 370.1 $261.0 $127.7 $1,209.6 $415.6 $3.38 $204.2 $1.9 $17.3 $697.6 $371.0 $540.3 $3,679.5 2001 375.9 $270.2 $125.0 $1,277.4 $426.4 $3.62 $201.5 $1.3 $17.2 $712.9 $379.1 $568.7 $3,790.5 2002 390.4 $269.8 $125.0 $1,267.4 $436.2 $3.65 $206.0 $2.5 $20.0 $744.8 $396.1 $598.7 $3,861.9 2003 363.2 $261.9 $117.6 $1,325.7 $456.2 $3.79 $213.2 $1.4 $21.9 $770.9 $410.0 $630.2 $3,945.8 2004 306.9 $258.7 $108.2 $1,395.4 $475.4 $3.94 $216.0 $1.5 $24.0 5799.1 5425.0 $663.3 $4,014.0 2005 287.8 $239.6 $90.5 $1,599.0 $516.0 $4.17 $211.1 $1.9 $25.0 $815.0 $433.5 $698.3 $4,223.6 2006 272.4 $222.7 $92.1 $1,591.4 $478.0 $4.41 $205.7 $2.4 $23.8 $819.1 $435.6 $735.0 $4,147.6 Sources: See text 84