Some of our most prominent economic statistics measure change in the total output of the U.S. economy. But this single number approach to economic progress rings hollow with many workers, who wonder why they aren’t seeing prosperity in their own lives. The goal of our GDP 2.0 project is to break down these monolithic numbers and understand how the economy is performing for Americans of different income levels, different regions of the country, and more.
Featured work
New research doesn’t overturn consensus on rising U.S. income inequality
January 10, 2024
January 10, 2024
GDP 2.0: Measuring who prospers when the U.S. economy grows
July 11, 2023
July 11, 2023
Executive actions to modernize federal data collection and improve measurements of U.S. economic inequality
March 22, 2023
March 22, 2023
New digital tools demonstrate the promise of measuring well-being in the United States
December 21, 2022
December 21, 2022
Structural racism and the coronavirus recession highlight why more and better U.S. data need to be widely disaggregated by race and ethnicity
September 24, 2020
September 24, 2020
Explore Content in GDP 2.0206
NBER Summer Institute 2022 Round-up: Week 2
July 26, 2022
July 26, 2022
Canada is the first country to release subannual statistics on the distribution of income. Here’s how it was done.
July 7, 2022
July 7, 2022
More frequent disaggregated data on U.S. income inequality would improve economic research and inform policymaking
February 24, 2022
February 24, 2022
Six charts that explain how inequality in the United States changed over the past 20 years
February 1, 2022
February 1, 2022
The U.S. economy is in its fourth decade of rising inequality amid the need for more accurate data on its consequences
January 27, 2022
January 27, 2022
Expert Focus: Advancing the frontier of economic data creation and measurement
January 13, 2022
January 13, 2022
Testimony by Jonathan Fisher before the House Select Committee on Economic Disparity and Fairness in Growth
November 17, 2021
November 17, 2021
In Conversation with Erica Groshen
October 25, 2021
October 25, 2021
Dispatch from EconCon 2021: Addressing racial and gender stratification in the U.S. economy is key to an equitable and sustainable recovery
October 21, 2021
October 21, 2021
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