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National Income Accounting

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Every dollar of output equals a dollar of income in the form of. wages, salaries ... Two Methods of Measuring. The Income Approach. The Expenditure Approach ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: National Income Accounting


1
National Income Accounting
2
Simon Kuznets
  • 1901-1985
  • Nobel Prize 1971

3
Sir Richard Stone
  • 1913-1991
  • Nobel Prize 1984

4
James Meade
  • 1907-1995
  • Nobel Prize 1977

5
National Income Accounting
  • GDP Defined
  • Nominal vs. Real GDP

6
National Income Accounting
  • Measuring Total Economic Output of Goods and
    Services
  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total value
    of all final goods and services produced in an
    economy in a one-year period.

7
National Income Accounting
  • GDP Defined
  • Nominal vs. Real GDP

8
National Income Accounting
  • Real and Nominal GDP
  • Nominal GDP is GDP calculated at existing prices.

9
National Income Accounting
  • Real and Nominal GDP
  • Real GDP is nominal GDP adjusted for inflation.
  • Real GDP is important to society because it
    measures what is really produced.

10
National Income Accounting
  • Real GDP is nominal GDP adjusted for inflation.

11
National Income Accounting
  • Circular Flow
  • Income Method
  • Expenditure Method
  • Limitations

12
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
  • Output Income
  • Every dollar of output equals a dollar of income
    in the form of
  • wages, salaries
  • interest, dividends
  • rent, profit

13
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
Firms
Households
(production
14
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
Goods
Households
Firms

Production
15
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
F
actor services
Goods
Firms

Households
Production
16
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
F
actor services
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
17
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
F
actor services
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
18
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
F
actor services
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
Investment
Saving
Financial mar
k
ets
P
e
r
4
)
s
o
i
o
n
(
19
National Income Accounting
Taxes
Taxes
Spending
F
actor services
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
Investment
Saving
Financial mar
k
ets
P
e
r
4
)
s
o
i
o
n
(
20
National Income Accounting The Circular Flow
Exports
USA
China
Imports
21
National Income Accounting
  • Circular Flow
  • Two Methods of Measuring
  • Avoid Double Counting

22
National Income Accounting
  • Two Methods of Measuring
  • The Income Approach
  • The Expenditure Approach

23
National Income Accounting
  • The Income Method
  • The income approach is shown on the top half of
    the circular flow.

24
National Income Accounting
F
actor services
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
25
National Income Accounting
  • The Income Method
  • National income is the total income earned by
    citizens and businesses in a country in one year.

26
National Income Accounting
  • The Income Method
  • Salaries and wages.
  • Rents are payments for use of land and buildings
  • Interest includes payments for loans by
    households to firms.
  • Profits are payments to the owners of firms.

27
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Method
  • The expenditure approach is shown on the bottom
    half of the circular flow.

28
National Income Accounting
Government
F
actor services
Taxes
Spending
Goods
Household
Fir
ms
(production
Investment
Saving
Financial mar
k
ets
P
e
r
4
)
s
o
i
o
n
(
29
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Specifically, GDP is equal to the sum of the four
    categories of expenditures.
  • GDP C I G (X - M)

C represents Consumer Spending
30
Consumer Spending
31
Consumer Spending
  • Household Consumption Types
  • Durable Goods (last gt 1 year)
  • Non durable Goods
  • Services

32
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Consumption
  • When individuals receive income, they can spend
    it on domestic goods, save it it, pay taxes, or
    buy foreign goods.
  • This is the largest part of GDP

33
Consumer Spending
34
Consumer Spending
  • Options for Savings
  • Bank Savings Account
  • CD or NOW Account
  • Money Market Account
  • U.S. Treasury Account
  • Stock or Bond Investment
  • Real Estate

35
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • GDP C I G (X - M)

I represents Business Investment Spending
36
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Investment
  • The portion of their income that individuals save
    leaves the income stream and goes into financial
    markets.

37
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Investment Spending Includes
  • Business spending on capital goods such as
    equipment
  • All construction spending
  • Residential
  • Non Residential
  • Net Change in Business Inventories

38
Investment Spending
  • Source of funds for Investment
  • Sale of Stock
  • Sale of Bonds
  • Loans from Financial Institutions
  • Commercial Paper
  • Retained Earnings (business saving)
  • Net income after taxes and expenses
  • Depreciation (capital consumption allowance)

39
Investment Spending
  • Construction
  • Residential / Commercial
  • Capital Equipment
  • Machinery, Tools, Computers, Etc.
  • Net Change in Inventory

40
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • GDP C I G (X - M)

G represents Government Spending
41
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Government consumption and investment
  • When individuals pay taxes, those taxes are
    either spent by government on goods and services
    or are returned to individuals in the form of
    transfer payments.

42
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Government consumption and investment
  • When the federal government runs a deficit, it
    must borrow from financial markets to make up the
    difference. Borrowing occurs through the sale of
    U.S. Treasury securities
  • T-Bills (short-term debt)
  • T-Notes (intermediate term debt)
  • T-Bonds (long-term debt)

43
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • GDP C I G (X - M)

X represents Export Spending M represent Import
Spending
44
National Income Accounting
Exports
USA
China
Imports
45
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Net exports
  • Spending on foreign goods produced in a foreign
    country escapes the system and does not add to
    domestic production, thus spending on imports are
    subtracted from total expenditures.

46
National Income Accounting
  • The Expenditure Approach
  • Net exports
  • Exports to foreign nations are added to total
    expenditures.
  • Imports from foreign nations are subtracted from
    total expenditures.
  • These flows are usually combined into net exports.

47
National Income Accounting
  • Equality of Income and Expenditure
  • Income and expenditures must be equal because of
    the rules of double-entry bookkeeping.
  • Profit is the balancing item.

48
National Income Accounting
  • Equality of Income and Expenditure
  • The national income accounting identity allows
    GDP to be calculated either by adding up all
    values of final output or by adding up the values
    of all earnings or income.

49
Limitations of GDP
  • Household and Underground Output not counted.
  • Capital goods used up in production
    (depreciation) is included Overstates real
    output.
  • Quality of output is unknown.

50
End of Presentation
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