This Debate explores whether St. Kitts and Nevis should subordinate GDP, CBI, tourism receipts, and fiscal metrics to life-capital — or whether doing so too rigidly could weaken the fiscal engines needed for resilience. It examines mis-nesting, food-health costs, water-energy dependency, CBI patrimony, the Life-Capital Test, and the National Life-Coherence Dashboard. Read More
Tag: GDP
Episode 20: From GDP to Life-Capital in St. Kitts and Nevis: St. Kitts and Nevis as a Life-Coherent Island Commonwealth
This Deep Dive explores how St. Kitts and Nevis could move beyond GDP, tourism arrivals, and CBI revenues toward life-capital: the real wealth of water security, food sovereignty, youth belonging, public health, ecological resilience, and the civil commons. It unpacks mis-nesting, the Life-Capital Test, the National Life-Coherence Dashboard, and the seven missions of a Life-Coherent Island Commonwealth. Read More
Performance as a Civilizational Liability: Semantic Warfare, GDP, and the Structural Contradiction of SDG 8 | ChatGPT5.1 & NotbookLM
Modern civilization governs itself through a performance grammar that equates output, productivity, and economic growth with progress. This white paper demonstrates that this semantic architecture, when applied to living systems, is biologically incoherent and structurally dangerous. Drawing on regulatory biology, stress physiology, life-course health, ecological resilience, and development economics, the paper shows that performance is a transient expression of stored capacity, not a measure of system health. When performance is elevated to the master variable of governance — as occurs through GDP-centered policy and Sustainable Development Goal 8 — societies reproduce at planetary scale the same pathological dynamics that generate chronic disease, burnout, and organ failure in individual bodies: chronic stress without sufficient recovery. The paper critiques GDP as a throughput metric incapable of registering biological and ecological depletion, analyzes the internal contradiction embedded within SDG 8, and proposes a post-performance metric grammar grounded in recovery capacity, intrinsic health, functional realization, and intergenerational reserve. It argues that the central task of 21st-century governance is semantic before it is technical: to reinstall capacity over output, recovery over throughput, and life-course solvency over quarterly performance. Only through this reversal can development be reconciled with health, and economics with biology.