EPI: a revolutionary way to assess economic performance

THE ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE INDICATOR (EPI)

is a macro-indicator to measure state, national, and global economic performance.

The Economic Performance Index is the only patented macroeconomic indicator that examines the overall performance of a country’s economy and reports any deviation from the desired level of economic performance. It incorporates the following variables:

  • The inflation rate measures of the economy’s monetary stance.
  • The unemployment rate measures the economy’s production stance.
  • The budget deficit as a percentage of total GDP measures the economy’s fiscal stance.
  • The change in real GDP measures the aggregate performance of the entire economy.

There is a straightforward calculation that allows us to quickly construct the Economy Index, resulting in an easy to understand number that automatically “scores” the performance of the economy. How does it work?

The Math Behind the Index

We constructed the Economy Index such that it:

  • falls when there is inflation or deflation
  • falls when the unemployment rate rises
  • falls when the government deficit rises
  • rises with positive growth in GDP

We begin with a total score of 100% (i.e. the economy at “perfect performance”) and then subtract the inflation rate, then the unemployment rate, then the budget deficit as a percentage of GDP and, finally, add back the percentage change in a real GDP, all weighted and calculated as deviations from their desired values. A letter grade is then assigned to these scores to further communicate economic performance in a methodology easily understood by everyone.
In other words, the EPI is just the following: 100% minus the absolute value of the inflation rate (We consider any deviation from a stable price level – i.e. positive or negative rates of inflation) as leading to welfare losses, so the absolute value of inflation is taken in the formula) , minus the unemployment rate, minus the budget deficit as a percentage of GDP, plus the percentage change in a real gross domestic product:

100%
− |inflation (%)|
− unemployment (%)
− budget deficit/GDP (%)
+ GDP growth (%)
= the Economy Index

It is really as easy as that!
Changes in the economy affect the Economy Index in a very straightforward manner. For example, if the inflation rate increases from 2% to 3%, the Index score falls by one percentage point; if an equal change occurs in the opposite direction, the score rises by same amount. Similarly, a one-percentage-point increase in the unemployment rate would lead to a one-percentage-point decrease in the score. On the other hand, a fall in the unemployment rate (i.e. an improvement) improves the score respectively. The same inverse relationship holds for the budget deficit: if the deficit increases, the score falls; if the budget deficit shrinks, the score rises. Finally, if the percentage growth rate of GDP rises, so, too, does the score; when the percentage growth rate drops, the Index falls proportionately.
Imagine a perfect world, in which inflation is zero, the unemployment rate is 4.75%, the government budget is balanced (zero deficit), and GDP growth is 4.75%. In this case, the Index score would be:

100%
− 0% inflation
− 4.75% unemployment
− 0% budget deficit
+ 4.75% GDP growth
= 100%

This is just one example of a “perfect” score. It is clear that 100% can be achieved in many different ways. For example, an economy with 1% inflation, 5% unemployment, 2% budget surplus, and 4% growth rate, would also score 100%. Note that the score can be more than 100% if the economy is experiencing high economic growth. For example, if the GDP growth in the previous example were 5% instead of 4%, the economy would score 101%. While a “perfect” score of 100% may not seem realistic, our research shows that the U.S. economy achieved this score and even higher in one year out of every ten, on average, throughout U.S. history since 1790.
The provided EPI formula may be too simple. Many economists would say that the volatility of its components is different and averages are different, too. They would also say that, when our Index is applied to different countries, the weights of components should not be the same. We had similar reservations about this simple formula when we started analyzing it.
To overcome problems of consistency during periods of high economic volatility and to make scores comparable across countries, we initially created the weighted Index that normalizes the data by introducing weights and desired values to each sub-component. Weights are determined by calculating the inverse standard deviation of each economic variable multiplied by the average standard deviation of all variables such that the sum of weights is equal to one. The results of our research show that there is very little difference between the raw score and weighted score for many developed economies. For the U.S., the simple and weighted Index formulas give almost identical dynamics of the index throughout the U.S. history. At the same time, the weighted formula has better applications in developing and emerging market economies.
As such, we will use the raw formula throughout our book as the best means for gauging the true performance of an economy, with the caveat that it works best in developed countries.

The Economy Index for 2014 and 2015

So let’s see what the Index looks like when we actually do the math. The official government statistics for the U.S. in 2014 and 2015 are as follows:

Year Inflation Unemployment Deficit GDP
2014  1.6  6.2  4.1  2.4
2015  0.1  5.3  3.8  2.6

To determine the Index score for 2014, we would begin with 100%, then subtract the inflation rate of 1.6%, subtract the unemployment rate of 6.2%, subtract the budget deficit of 4.1%, and then add the GDP growth of 2.4%:

100%
− 1.6% inflation
− 6.2% unemployment
− 4.1% budget deficit
+ 2.4% GDP
= 90.5%

The value of 90.5% has an important meaning. It indicates that economy was about more than nine percentage points away from perfect condition. According to our Index, in 2014 the principal factors that depressed a better economic performance were the unemployment rate and the budget deficit.
If we do the same for 2015:

100%
− 0.1% inflation
− 5.3% unemployment
− 3.8% budget deficit
+ 2.6% GDP
= 93.4%

From 2014 to 2015, inflation fell almost to zero, the unemployment rate got marginally better, the budget deficit slightly diminished, and GDP improved. Subsequently, the Index rose. So we can see that, according to our Index, 2014 was a better year than 2015. Instinctively, most people would agree with this.

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