2020 candidate Andrew Yang: We need a 'humanity-adjusted GDP'

This post originally ran on April 30, 2018 and was updated on March 18, 2019.

Until recently, Andrew Yang, who’s seeking the presidential nomination of the Democratic Party in 2020, was considered a fringe candidate and certainly not a household name.

But after appearing on Joe Rogan’s podcast and “The Breakfast Club,” his bold ideas have been garnering attention, especially among the conservative youth of America. His supporters (the #YangGang) have made him the subject of internet memes as snippets of his interviews have been trending on Reddit and 4chan, a site popular among white nationalists.

While he’s been garnering more attention recently, Yang was actually one of the first candidates to throw his hat into the ring, filing paperwork with the Federal Election Commission on November 6, 2017.

The central tenet of his campaign is the idea of universal basic income (UBI). All U.S. citizens between the ages of 18 and 64 would receive an unconditional $1,000 per month, which would cost the U.S. between $2 trillion and $3 trillion per year.

‘Humanity-adjusted GDP’

Yang, 44, is the founder and former CEO of Venture for America, a nonprofit fellowship program that connects college graduates with two years of experience at start-ups or early-stage companies. Previously he served as CEO of Manhattan GMAT until its acquisition by Kaplan in 2009. Given his work as an entrepreneur and business leader, Yang said he’s anxious about workers being displaced by automation.

Currently, gross domestic product, or GDP, is the universal way to measure the market value of goods and services produced in a given economy. Yang proposes a new measurement that takes factors like mental health, childhood success, engagement with work, levels of criminality and recidivism into account. Though he has yet to come up with a name, the working title is something along the lines of “American Scorecard.”