Gross domestic product (GDP) is a basic measure of an economy’s economic performance. GDP is the market value of all final goods and services made within the borders of a nation in a year measured in Dollars. Globally, GDP is equal to the total monetary income generated by production of goods and services in a country.
Gross Domestic Product does not take into account many important variables accelerated by Social Media and growing exponentially in economic influence.
GDP counts only industrial output, but…
Industrial output is becoming increasingly dependent on social networks and social innovation. GDP does not take into account such non-market transactions such as open source development, crowd sourced innovation, conversational currency, social capital, creative capital, or intellectual capital exchanged between people in diverse social networks
GDP reflects Wall Street Priorities, but…
Wall Street Priorities are increasingly challenged by social priorities. GDP does not account for sustainable business practices, heroism, mentorship, activism, volunteerism, social networking, uncompensated innovation, and community involvement. GDP does not account for quality improvements and social multipliers such as aggregation of social media, increasingly powerful computers, acceleration of conversations, online etiquette, multi-media, and social editorial services.
All of the above exclusions are valuable, because…
These exclusions add value, they store value, they create value, they distribute value, and they exchange value. If we called it a financial instrument that is highly convertible, extremely liquid, and easily transported it would describe a currency by any definition of the word. For the purpose of this discussion, call this currency the “Rallod” – or Dollar spelled backwards. The Rallod is the currency of the new American economic and production paradigm.
The Invisible Currency
For Example; Twitter is doing in Iran what America has been trying to do in Iraq for 8 years. Face book, LinkedIn, and the entirety of social media space is producing many times the effectiveness of the $200 Billion U.S. advertising industry in terms of driving people to specific action. Social vetting platforms such as blogs, commentaries, groups, and content aggregation have increased the efficiency of markets by vastly reducing arbitrage opportunities while also identifying scams and corruption. Human productivity is being converted to Rallods and there is no politician, executive, or white collar criminal anywhere in the world who is not deeply concerned about this invisible currency.
The Best is Yet to Come:
The “Last Mile of Social Media” is analogous to the last mile of broadband Internet – the marginal cost of reaching every person in every household and tightening social networks to extremely high resolution, is diminishing rapidly. The Last Mile will bring communities together to vet local politicians, corporations, products, and policies. The Last Mile will formulate a knowledge inventory combines with close proximity of knowledge assets and a percentile search engine to predict outcomes. The Last Mile of Social Media will duplicate every function that exists in a corporation except it will be built upon the social media operating system; aggregated, amalgamated, sustainable, and reflecting social priorities.
So what happens to GDP?
GDP by current measure will reflect only the value of the “dollar”, not necessarily the value of the human productivity. Perhaps it already does.