Ch 20 - Measuring National Income, GDP

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

2:07 PM

    Important Gross Domestic Product

     

    GDP

      The market value of all final goods produced in a country in a given time period

       

      • Main measure of economic prosperity or standard of living
      • Measures total value of production in a country
      • Normal a year or a quarter of year

    Market Value

    Goods value at their market prices

    Final good

    An item bought by a final user during a specified time period

    • NO financial transactions (transfer payments, stocks, bonds)
    • NO second hand goods

    Intermediate good

    Item used as an input into a final good or service
    Not counted to avoid Double Counting

     

    Important Calculation of GDP

     

     

    Expenditure Approach

     

    Y

     income

    GDP (AKA)

    C

    consumption expenditure

    Personal expenditures on consumer goods and services

    I

    Investment expenditure

    Business investment

    G

     Government expenditure

     

    X

    Exports

     

    M

    Imports

     

     

    Consumption expenditure

    Household spending of goods produced that year

    Investment Expenditure

    Fixed Investment (equipment)
    Inventory investment (unsold goods)

    Residential construction (new houses)

    *These are all called Gross Investment

    Net investment is investment less depreciation (Not used for GDP)

    *Does not include financial assets

    Government Purchases

    Valued at cost of production (note market value)

    • Usually there is no market value

    *Transfer payments are not counted (double counted in C)

    Net Exports

    *Imports is subtracted because it does not generate income domestically.

     

     

    Income Approach

     

     

    W

    Wages, salaries

    C

    Corporate profits

    In

    Interest & Miscellaneous investment income

    F

    Farmers' income

    I nonfarm

    Income from non-farm unincorporated businesses

     

     

     

    Taxes

    PST, GST, Excise Taxes

    Indirect Taxes

    Taxes less subsidies

    Depreciation

    Asset will eventually need to be replaced

     

     

     

    GNP

    Total income to residents in Canada
    (Doesn't matter where that income was generated)
    Better measure of income of domestic residents

     

    Real GDP

    GDP valued at the prices of a base year
    Changes based on quantity produced, not prices

    Nominal GDP (GDP)

    GDP valued at the prices that prevailed in that same year

     

     

    Important Uses of Real GDP

    • Compare standard of living over time
    • Compare standard of living between countries

     

    Potential GDP

    Value of real GDP when all resources are fully employed
    (Grows because productivity grows)

     

    Business cycle

    Expansion
    Peak
    Recession
    Trough

     

    Important Omissions from GDP

     

    • Illegal activities
    • Underground economy (avoiding taxes)
    • Home production
    • Economic "bads" (pollution)

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

 

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