9,873
Views
10
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Hidden in Plain Sight: Unpaid Household Services and the Politics of GDP Measurement

ORCID Icon

References

  • Acharya, A., 2016. Idea-shift: how ideas from the rest are reshaping global order. Third World Quarterly, 37 (7), 1156–70.
  • Ady, P., 1962. Use of National Accounts in Africa. Review of Income and Wealth, 1, 52–65.
  • Allan, B., 2018. From subjects to objects: knowledge in international relations theory. European Journal of International Relations, 24 (4), 841–64.
  • Ban, C., 2015. Austerity versus stimulus? Understanding fiscal policy change at the International Monetary Fund since the great recession. Governance, 28 (2), 167–83.
  • Ban, C. and Patenaude, B., 2018. The professional politics of the austerity debate: a comparative field analysis of the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Public Administration, 2019, 1–16.
  • Bardasi, E. and Wodon, Q., 2010. Working long hours and having no choice: time poverty in Guinea. Feminist Economics, 16 (3), 45–78.
  • Barnett, M. and Finnemore, M., 2004. Rules for the world: international organizations in global politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Benería, L., 1992. Accounting for women’s work: the progress of two decades. World Development, 20 (11), 1547–60.
  • Benham, F., 1953. Income and product in under-developed countries: comments on the paper by Professor Frankel. Review of Income and Wealth, 3 (1), 169–77.
  • Bos, F. 2009. The national accounts as a tool for analysis and policy: history, economic theory and data compilation issues [online]. Munich Personal RePEc Archive. Available from: mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/23582/.
  • Breslau, D., 2003. Economics invents the economy: mathematics, statistics, and models in the work of Irving Fisher and Wesley Mitchell. Theory and Society, 32, 379–411.
  • Broad, R., 2006. Research, knowledge, and the art of ‘paradigm maintenance’: the World Bank's development economics Vice-Presidency (DEC). Review of International Political Economy, 13 (3), 387–419.
  • Broome, A. and Seabrooke, L., 2012. Seeing like an international organisation. New Political Economy, 17 (1), 1–16.
  • Broussolle, D., 2015. The emerging new concepts of services in the system of national accounts and the balance of payments. Review of Income and Wealth, 61 (3), 573–86.
  • Chadeau, A., 1992. What is households’ non-market production worth? OECD Economic Studies, 18, 85–103.
  • Christophers, B., 2011. Making finance productive. Economy and Society, 40 (1), 112–40.
  • Christophers, B., 2013. Banking across boundaries. Hoboken: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Coyle, D., 2014. GDP: a brief but affectionate history. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Coyle, D. 2017. Do-it-yourself digital: the production boundary and the productivity puzzle. ESCoE Discussion Paper 2017-01 (June), Economic Statistics Centre of Excellence.
  • Davis, K., Kingsbury, B., and Merry, S., 2012. Indicators as a technology of global governance. Law & Society Review, 46 (1), 71–104.
  • Dersnah, M., 2019. United Nations gender experts and the push to focus on conflict-related sexual violence. European Journal of Politics and Gender, 2 (1), 41–56.
  • Desrosières, A., 2000. Measurement and its uses: harmonization and quality in social statistics. International Statistical Institute, 68 (2), 173–87.
  • Dominguez, L., 1947. National income estimates of Latin-American countries. In: Conference on research in income and wealth, studies in income and wealth. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 160–244.
  • Elson, D. 2005. Unpaid work, the Millennium Development Goals, and capital accumulation: notes for a presentation. Conference on Unpaid Work and the Economy: Gender, Poverty and the Millennium Development Goals, 1–3 October 2005 Annandale-on-Hudson, 1–12.
  • Enns, C., 2015. Knowledges in competition: knowledge discourse at the World Bank during the knowledge for development era. Global Social Policy: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Public Policy and Social Development, 15 (1), 61–80.
  • Esquivel, V., 2011. Sixteen years after Beijing: what are the new policy agendas for time-use data collection? Feminist Economics, 17 (4), 215–38.
  • Fioramonti, L., 2013. Gross domestic problem: the politics behind the world's most powerful number. London: Zed Books.
  • Fioramonti, L., 2017. The world after GDP. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Folbre, N., 2009. Greed, lust, and gender: a history of economic ideas. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Folbre, N., 2014. The care economy in Africa: subsistence production and unpaid care. Journal of African Economies, 23, i128–56.
  • Frankel, S., 1953. Concepts of income and welfare in advanced and under-developed societies with special reference to the intercomparability of national income estimates. Review of Income and Wealth, 3, 156–68.
  • Goetz, A.M., 1997. Getting institutions right for women. London: Sage.
  • Haas, P., 1992. Introduction: epistemic communities and international policy coordination. International Organization, 46 (1), 1–35.
  • Hall, P. and Taylor, R., 1996. Political science and the three new institutionalisms. Political Studies, 44 (5), 952–73.
  • Harrison, A., ed., 2005. The background to the 1993 revision of the System of National Accounts [online]. Available from: unstats.un.org/unsd/sna1993/history/backgrd.pdf.
  • Hay, C., 2006. Constructivist institutionalism. In: R. Rhodes, S. Binder, and B Rockman, ed. The Oxford Handbook of political institutions. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 56–74.
  • Hay, C., 2016. Good in a crisis: the ontological institutionalism of social constructivism. New Political Economy, 21 (6), 520–35.
  • Herrera, Y., 2010. Mirrors of the economy: national accounts and international norms in Russia and beyond. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  • Hoekstra, R., 2019. Replacing GDP by 2030: towards a common language for the well-being and sustainability community. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Hoskyns, C. and Rai, S.M., 2007. Recasting the global political economy: counting women’s unpaid work. New Political Economy, 12 (3), 297–317.
  • International Labour Organization, 2013. Measuring informality: a statistical manual on the informal sector and informal employment. Geneva: ILO.
  • International Labour Organization, 2016. Women at work: trends 2016. Geneva: ILO.
  • International Labour Organization, 2018. Care work and care jobs for the future of decent work. Geneva: ILO.
  • Intersecretariat Working Group on National Accounts (ISWGNA), 1993. System of national accounts 1993. Washington, DC: Inter-Secretariat Working Group on National Accounts.
  • Intersecretariat Working Group on National Accounts (ISWGNA), 2008. System of national accounts 2008, Washington, DC: Inter-Secretariat Working Group on National Accounts.
  • Intersecretariat Working Group on National Accounts (ISWGNA). 2018. Report of the intersecretariat working group on National Accounts. Statistical Commission Items for Discussion and Decision, E/CN.3/201.
  • Kendrick, J., 1970. The historical development of national-income accounts. History of Political Economy, 2 (2), 284–315.
  • Kentikelenis, A.E. and Seabrooke, L., 2017. The politics of world polity: script-writing in international organizations. American Sociological Review, 82 (5), 1065–92.
  • Kunz, R., Prügl, E., and Thompson, H., 2019. Gender expertise in global governance: contesting the boundaries of a field. European Journal of Politics and Gender, 2 (1), 23–40.
  • Kuznets, S., 1949. National income and industrial structure. Econometrica, 17, 205–41.
  • Leander, A. and Waever, O., 2018. Assembling exclusive expertise: knowledge, ignorance and conflict resolution in the global South. London: Routledge.
  • Lepenies, P., 2016. The power of a single number: the political history of GDP. New York: Columbia University Press.
  • Lequiller, F. and Blades, D., 2014. Understanding national accounts: second edition. Paris: OECD Publishing.
  • Littoz-Monnet, A., 2017. Expert knowledge as a strategic resource: international bureaucrats and the shaping of bioethical standards. International Studies Quarterly, 61, 584–95.
  • Mahoney, J., 2000. Path dependence in historical sociology. Theory and Society, 29, 507–48.
  • Masood, E., 2016. The great invention: the story of GDP and the making and unmaking of the modern world. New York: Pegasus Books.
  • Miranda, V. 2011. Cooking, caring and volunteering: unpaid work around the world. OECD Social, Employment and Migration Working Papers, no. 116. Paris: OECD Publishing, 1 40.
  • Mitchell, T., 2002. Rule of experts: Egypt, techno-politics, modernity. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Mitchell, T., 2005. The work of economics: how a discipline makes its world. European Journal of Sociology, 46 (2), 297–320.
  • Momani, B., 2007. IMF staff: missing link in fund reform proposals. Review of International Organizations, 2 (1), 39–57.
  • Morgan, M. 2009. Seeking parts, looking for wholes. History of Observation in Economics Working Paper Series, 1. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam, 1–56.
  • Mügge, D., 2016. Studying macroeconomic indicators as powerful ideas. Journal of European Public Policy, 23 (3), 410–27.
  • Mügge, D., 2019. International economic statistics: biased arbiters in global affairs? Fudan Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences, 1–20. doi.org/10.1007/s40647-019-00255-5.
  • Petiteville, F., 2018. International organizations beyond depoliticized governance. Globalizations, 15 (3), 301–13.
  • Philipsen, D., 2015. The little big number: how GDP came to rule the world and what to do about it. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Pigou, A.C., 1920. The economics of welfare. London: Macmillan Press.
  • Pilling, D., 2018. The growth delusion: wealth, poverty, and the well-being of nations. New York: Tim Duggan Books.
  • Polanyi, K., 2016. ‘Socialist accounting’ [Sozialistische Rechnungslegung] by Karl Polanyi: with preface ‘Socialism and the embedded economy’ (Fischer, A., Woodruff, D., and Bockman, J., Trans). Theory and Society, 45, 385–427. (Original work published 1922).
  • Rajão, R. and Duarte, T., 2018. Performing postcolonial identities at the United Nations’ climate negotiations. Postcolonial Studies, 21 (3), 364–78.
  • Rao, R.K.R.V., 1953. Some reflections on the comparability of real national incomes of industrialised and under-developed countries. Review of Income and Wealth, 3, 178–210.
  • Reid, M., 1934. Economics of household production. New York: J. Wiley & Sons.
  • Reinold, T., 2017. The path of least resistance: mainstreaming ‘social issues’ in the International Monetary Fund. Global Society, 31 (3), 392–416.
  • Sakuma, I., 2013. The production boundary reconsidered. Review of Income and Wealth, 59 (3), 556–67.
  • Samuels, L.H., 1962. The uses and limitations of national economic accounting, with special reference to South Africa. Review of Income and Wealth, 1, 162–81.
  • Schmelzer, M., 2016. The hegemony of growth: The OECD and the making of the economic growth paradigm. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Schmidt, V., 2008. Discursive institutionalism: the explanatory power of ideas and discourse. Annual Review of Political Science, 11, 303–26.
  • Schmidt, V., 2010. Taking ideas and discourse seriously: explaining change through discursive institutionalism as the fourth ‘new institutionalism’. European Political Science Review, 2 (1), 1–25.
  • Seabrooke, L. and Tsingou, E., 2016. Bodies of knowledge in reproduction: epistemic boundaries in the political economy of fertility. New Political Economy, 21 (1), 69–89.
  • Seabrooke, L. and Wigan, D., 2016. Powering ideas through expertise: professionals in global tax battles. Journal of European Public Policy, 23 (3), 357–74.
  • Seguino, S., 2019. Engendering macroeconomic theory and policy. Feminist Economics, 0 (0), 1–35. doi:10.1080/13545701.2019.1609691.
  • Sending, O., 2015. The politics of expertise: competing for authority in global governance. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
  • Speich, D. 2008. Travelling with the GDP through early development economics’ history. Working Papers on The Nature of Evidence: How Well Do ‘Facts’ Travel?,33/08. London: London School of Economics, 1–33.
  • Sridhar, D., 2007. Economic ideology and politics in the World Bank: defining hunger. New Political Economy, 12 (4), 499–516.
  • Stiglitz, J., Sen, A., and Fitoussi, J., 2009. Report by the commission on the measurement of economic performance and social progress. Paris: Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Social Progress.
  • Studenski, P., 1958. The income of nations: theory, measurement and analysis past and present. New York: New York University Press.
  • Telleria, J., 2017. Power relations? What power relations? The depoliticising conceptualisation of development of the UNDP. Third World Quarterly, 38 (9), 2143–58.
  • Tsingou, E., 2015. Club governance and the making of global financial rules. Review of International Political Economy, 22 (2), 225–56.
  • United Nations, 2015. The world's women 2015: trends and statistics. New York: United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistics Division.
  • United Nations Statistical Commission (UNSC). 1981. Report on the 21st Session [online]. Available from: https://unstats.un.org/unsd/statcom/reports/.
  • Vanoli, A., 2005. A history of national accounting. Amsterdam: IOS Press.
  • Vetterlein, A., 2012. Seeing like the World Bank on poverty. New Political Economy, 17 (1), 35–58.
  • Vetterlein, A., 2014. The discursive power of international organisations. In: D. Béland, and K Petersen, ed. Analysing social policy concepts and language. Bristol: Bristol University Press, 101–26.
  • Ward, M., 2004a. Quantifying the world: UN ideas and statistics. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Ward, M., 2004b. Some reflections on the 1968-93 SNA revision. Review of Income and Wealth, 50 (2), 299–313.
  • Waring, M., 1999. Counting for nothing: what men value and what women are worth. 2nd ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Waring, M., 2003. ‘Counting for something! Recognizing women’s contribution to the global economy through alternative accounting systems. Gender and Development, 11 (1), 35–43.
  • Wood, C., 1997. The first world/third party criterion: a feminist critique of production boundaries in economics. Feminist Economics, 3 (3), 47–68.