High immigration allows politicians to report positive overall GDP growth, creating an illusion of prosperity. However, this masks the reality that per-capita GDP has been stagnant or declining, meaning the average citizen is getting poorer. It is framed as a political tool to obscure a failing economy.

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Inaccurate headline statistics are not just academic; they actively shape policy. The misleading Consumer Price Index (CPI), for example, is used to determine Social Security benefits, food assistance eligibility, and state-level minimum wages. This means policy decisions are based on a distorted view of economic reality, leading to ineffective outcomes.

While Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures economic output via spending, Gross Domestic Income (GDI) measures it via income. The significant gap between the two in Q3 suggests the economy's underlying strength is weaker than the headline number indicates, as an average of the two is often more accurate.

The disconnect between strong GDP data and public dissatisfaction (the 'vibe-cession') is because wealth gains are concentrated at the top while median outcomes worsen. This K-shaped dynamic is politically unsustainable, forcing politicians away from supply-side policies and toward more populist, and often inflationary, measures.

Canada's recent strong GDP and jobs reports are misleading. A deeper look reveals GDP growth was driven by net exports while domestic consumption fell. Likewise, the job gains were exclusively part-time, with full-time employment declining, signaling a fragile underlying economy.

Politicians use divisive identity politics, focusing on powerless minorities, as a strategic distraction. By demonizing groups like immigrants or trans people, they redirect public frustration away from their failure to address fundamental economic problems like stagnant wages and unaffordable housing.

A government can artificially inflate its jobs numbers and GDP by going on a hiring spree for bureaucratic roles. This growth is illusory, or "phantom," as it's funded by printing money and doesn't contribute to the productive economy. It creates positive short-term metrics but fosters long-term inefficiency.

Headline GDP figures can be misleading in an environment of high immigration and inflation. Metrics like per-capita energy consumption or the number of labor hours needed to afford goods provide a more accurate picture of individual well-being, revealing that many feel poorer despite positive official growth numbers.

In a true market economy, labor shortages are impossible; wages would simply rise to attract workers. The argument that a country needs low-skilled immigrants to fill jobs is often a way to artificially suppress wages for the domestic working class, preventing market forces from correcting the balance.

Including government employment in GDP calculations is a form of double-counting tax revenue that masks the true health of the private sector. A major reduction in federal workers would reveal a startlingly low real growth rate, exposing decades of underlying economic stagnation.

Despite claiming growth is its top mission, the UK government is pursuing anti-growth measures. These include making permanent residency harder to obtain, which limits skilled migration, and passing employment bills that increase the difficulty and cost of hiring, directly undermining business expansion.

UK Governments Use Mass Immigration to Mask Per-Capita Economic Decline With GDP Growth | RiffOn