Title: Real GDP
1Real GDP the CPI
2Whats the most popular movie?
- Last weeks most popular movie? (as measured by
gross box office receipts) - Most popular of all time? USA
- And the winner is ....
3http//movies.nytimes.com/pages/movies/boxoffice/w
eekend_us/index.html
4Box Office GreatsUnadjusted
- Titanic (1997)
- Star Wars (1977)
- Shrek 2 (2004)
- E. T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
- Star Wars Episode I (1999)
- Pirates of the Caribbean (2006)
- Spider-Man (2002)
- Star Wars Episode III (2005)
- The Lord of the Rings (2003)
- Spiderman 2 (2004)
http//www.filmsite.org/boxoffice.html
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6The previous list is misleading
- Average ticket price today (2006) 6.55
- Average ticket price in 1939 0.23
- Box office receipts price x quantity.
- If we want to know the truly most popular
American film we need to eliminate changes in
prices - We need to keep prices constant using some
base year. - If we do, the winner is . . .
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8Box Office Greats AdjustedTo the average
ticket price in 2003
- Gone With the Wind (1939)
- Star Wars (1977)
- The Sound of Music (1965)
- E. T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982)
- The Ten Commandments (1956)
- Titanic (1997)
- Jaws (1975)
- Doctor Zhivago (1965)
- The Exorcist (1973)
- Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)
Source http//www.filmsite.org/
9Real Gross 585.5M 1998
Real Gross 1299.4M 1998
10Real GDP
- Excludes the effects of price inflation
- Why is this necessary?
- Real GDP allows us to measure the QUANTITY of
goods and services sold - If real GDP increases, we know the economy is
growing - Nominal GDP is the product of two forces PQ
- So we cant know what is causing the increase
11Table 5.5 GDP in an Apples and Oranges Economy
12Table 5.6 Calculation of Constant Dollar Real GDP
and Growth Rates (to be continued)
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1510971B
9121B
6657B
16Method of calculating real GDP
- Real GDP nominal GDP/price index100
- R N/PI100
- GDP deflator is the price index used
- In the previous balloon example
- 9121B 10971B/120.3100 1993 100
17No fault quiz
18Calculating Real GDP
- Team Exercise SG, 5th ed, p90
19Answers to exercise 6
- 6a R N/PI100 10082.2/109.4100 9215.9
- 6b N RPI/100 8859104.7/100 9275.4
- 6c PI N/R100 8318.4/8159.5100 101.9
- 6d ?N ?R ?PI
- ?N 3.8 (106.9 104.7)/104.7100
- ?N 3.8 2.1 5.9
- OR Real GDP 2000 88591.038 9195.6
- GDPnominal 9156.61.069 9830
- change (9830 9275)/9275 5.98 (or net of
2.18)
20Measuring price inflation
- Definition of price inflation a continual rise
in the general price level - How do we know if overall prices are inflating?
- Calculate a ratio of prices back then to prices
now? - The North Jersey marketbasket survey
- Need to weight prices
21Table 5.7 Calculation of a Constant Weight Price
Index (for Year 2, when Year 1 is Base)
22Basic Price Index
times 100 by convention
- Cost of CPI basket at
- CPI current year prices X 100
- Cost of CPI basket at
- base period prices
23Price index
- How inflation is measured
- How prices in a market basket of goods changes
over time - Two features
- A market basket a selection of goods
- A base year or period a point of reference
- Basic idea -- what did the market basket cost
- In current year prices?
- In base year prices?
24Composition of CPI market basket
Figure 6-7
8 groups (pie chart) 200 sub-categories 80,000
actual goods and services are priced each month.
25Interpreting an index
- Generally the percentage change in prices is
reported to the public not the level of the
CPI. - CPIJan1989 120 (base 1982/84)
- Prices increased 20 from the base period
- CPIJan1995 150 (base 1982/84)
- What is the increase from 1989 to 1995?
- chg (difference/initial number)100
- chg (150-120)/120100 30/120100 25
26Charts
27(Continued) Table 5.6 Calculation of Constant
Dollar Real GDP and Growth Rates
28Figure 5.1 U.S. GDP (Trillions of Dollars)
19902005
29No fault
30Table 5.7 Calculation of a Constant Weight Price
Index (for Year 2, when Year 1 is Base)
31Figure 5.2 The Traditional Macroeconomic Model
Circular Flow Diagram