EBOOK

The Full Measure

Jimmy Strobl
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Year
2026
Language
English

About

Every civilisation before the twentieth century understood that an economy exists to enable human flourishing. Aristotle distinguished household management from unlimited wealth-getting. The Confucian examination system shaped what an entire civilisation invested in for thirteen centuries. Ubuntu traditions measured economic success by the quality of relationships. Indigenous economies sustained ecological systems for tens of thousands of years. Islamic institutions embedded moral evaluation into economic governance.

Then, in 1934, a wartime production counter became the governing measure of economic health. GDP was never designed for this role. Its creator warned against it. The warning was ignored for ninety years.

The Full Measure documents the cost across eight dimensions of harm the economy produces (from workplace deaths to ecological collapse to the erosion of sustained attention) and twelve dimensions of human excellence it fails to enable (from practical judgment to collective intelligence to embodied ecological skill). It constructs the replacement: a twenty-dimension framework, grounded in bounded number theory and cross-civilisational evidence, that tracks what an economy actually does to the people and systems it touches.

The book specifies the institutional reforms needed to translate the framework into governance, from municipal budgets to central bank mandates to international lending conditionality. It does not propose something new. It recovers something old: the understanding, shared across every civilisation examined, that measuring whether an economy serves its people requires attention to dimensions a production counter cannot see.

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