Coyle's institutional stance: the economy is multidimensional and no single metric, however well-constructed, can capture its full dimensionality — a position distinct from both GDP defenders and GDP abolitionists.
Coyle is not a GDP abolitionist. She has repeatedly insisted that GDP does what it does remarkably well: it measures market production. The critique is that GDP has been asked to do something it was never designed to do — serve as a proxy for national welfare — and that the gap between what it measures and what it is used to evaluate has consequences. Measurement pluralism is the institutional stance that emerges from this position: retain the existing metric, supplement it with additional instruments, and accept that no single indicator can govern a complex economy. The stance is deliberately unglamorous. It offers no single replacement for the number everyone knows. It asks instead for a dashboard of numbers, each imperfect, that together provide information no individual metric can supply.
Measurement Pluralism
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Pluralism as a methodological commitment distinguishes Coyle's work from both defenders of GDP (who treat the metric as sufficient) and critics who propose wholesale replacement (who typically underestimate the