Title: Macroeconomic%20Measurements,
1ECONOMICS, 5e Roger Arnold
CHAPTER 6 Macroeconomic Measurements, Part II
GDP and Real GDP
2MACROECONOMIC QUESTIONS
- A Nation's Income
- The most central issue of macroeconomics is an
economy's total production of goods and services - A nation's income is the total of all the incomes
of the people that live there
3MACROECONOMIC QUESTIONS
- Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
- The dollar value of total output of goods and
services is called nominal GDP - Part of the increases in GDP reflect inflation
- Adjusting GDP for inflation gives real GDP
4MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES
- Definitions
- Real gross domestic product is a measure of a
country's total output of final markets goods and
services during some year - Nominal gross domestic product is the dollar
value of a country's output of final market goods
and services during some year
5SOURCE Bureau of Economic Analysis.
6Exhibit 4 The Circular Flow Total Purchases
(Expenditures) Equal Total Income in a Simple
Economy
7CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Consumption, or consumer spending, is spending by
people on the final goods and services for
current use
8CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Investment refers to spending to create new
capital goods, such as machines, equipment,
inventories, human skills, and knowledge
9CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Government purchases refers to all spending by
the government except transfer payment (direct
payments of money to people)
10CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Exports are sales of goods and services to people
and firms in other countries
11CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Exports are sales of goods and services to people
and firms in other countries - Imports are purchases of goods and services from
people and firms in other countries
12CIRCULAR FLOW AND AGGREGATE DEMAND
- Types of Spending
- Net exports, or the balance of international
trade, equals exports minus imports
13Exhibit 1 The Components of GDP
14What is the difference between GDP and GNP?
- GNP is the value of all final goods and services
produced by citizens of a nation regardless of
their location. - GDP is the value of all final goods and services
produced within the border of a nation regardless
of citizenship. - GNP GDP net foreign factor income
15Why do we make the distinction about FINAL goods?
- Final goods are in the hands of the ultimate
user. - Intermediate goods are inputs into the production
of final goods. - We only use final goods to avoid the problem of
DOUBLE COUNTING - Alternatively, we can use the value added at each
stage of production
16What GDP Omits
- Certain Nonmarket Goods and Services
- Underground Activities
- Sales of Used Goods
- Financial Transactions
- Government Transfer Payments
- Leisure
17GDP and Well Being
- GDP is useful in measuring the productive
capacity of an economy. - GDP is not necessarily a good measure of
happiness or well being. - Measurements of well being often include measures
of education, access to health care, infant
mortality, and life expectancy.
18Two Ways of Measuring GDP
- Expenditure approach
- Income approach
- See pages 79-80 in your workbook.
19The Expenditure Approach
- Household sector Consumption
- Business sector Gross private domestic
investment - Government sector Government purchases
- Foreign sector Net exports
20The Income Approach gives us NATIONAL INCOME
- Compensation of employees
- Proprietor's Income
- Corporate profits
- Rental income
- Interest
21From National Income to GDP Making Some
Adjustments
- - Income earned from the rest of the world
- Income earned by the rest of the world
- Indirect business taxes
- Capital consumption allowance (depreciation)
- Statistical discrepancy
22From National Income to GDP Making Some
Adjustments
- GDP NI indirect business taxes depreciation
net foreign factor income - NI GDP - indirect business taxes - depreciation
net foreign factor income
23Other National IncomeAccounting Measurements
- Net Domestic Product GDP - Depreciation
- Personal Income National Income - undist. corp.
profits - Social Security taxes - corp. profits
taxes transfer pmts. net interest - Disposable Income Personal Income - Personal
taxes - Disposable Income Personal Cons. Personal
Saving
24Desirable Economic States or Goals
- Price stability
- Low unemployment
- High and sustained economic growth
25MACROECONOMIC MODELS
- Business Cycles
- Business cycles are 2-year to 5-year fluctuations
around trends in real GDP and other related
variables
26MACROECONOMIC MODELS
- Business Cycles
- A recession is a large fall in the growth of real
GDP and related variables - A depression is an especially large recession
27What Is a Business Cycle?
- Peak
- Contraction (Recession)
- Trough
- Recovery
- Expansion
28Exhibit 7 The Phases of the Business Cycle