Title: National income accounting
1National income accounting
- Gross domestic product, GDP
2(No Transcript)
3Gross Domestic Product
- Expenditure approach
- Market value of all final goods and services
produced in an economy in a particular period of
time - Income approach
- Payments to owners of resources used to produce
aggregate output
4Market value
- Find total expenditure on each good and service
as Price x Quantity sold - Sum all of these
- Note only includes goods and services exchanged
in a market. Does not include household
production, e.g. garden veggies, home haircuts
5Final goods
- Only includes value of final goods and services
sold, i.e. sold to the final consumer - Does not include value of intermediary goods or
services, those that are processed further and
sold again, e.g. what goes into a T-shirt that
you buy i.e. cotton, cloth made from cotton,
plain white T-shirt made from the cloth - The value added by intermediary goods is included
in the price of the final good, i.e. the price of
your T-shirt includes the value of the cotton and
other intermediary goods that went into its
production - If intermediary goods were included we would be
double counting their value!
6Produced goods and service
- Only includes the value of goods and services
produced during the given period of time. - Goods produced but not yet sold are accounted for
as changes in business inventories - Sales of previously produced goods are not counted
7Expenditure approach to GDP
- GDP is divided into four aggregates
- Personal consumption, C
- Investment, I
- Government purchases, G
- Net exports, X - M
- GDP C I G (X-M)
8Gross Domestic Product, 2004
- Gross domestic product 11,734.3 billion
- C 8,214.3
- I 1,928.1
- G 2,215.9
- X-M -624.0
9Personal consumption, C
- Personal consumption expenditures 8,214.3
- Durable goods 987.8
- Nondurable goods 2,368.3
- Services 4,858.2
10Investment, gross private domestic
- Gross private domestic investment 1,928.1
- Fixed investment 1,872.6
- Change in business inventories 55.4
11Government purchases
- Government consumption expenditures
- and gross investment 2,215.9
- Federal 827.6
- State and local 1,388.3
12Net exports
- Net exports of goods and services -624.0
- Exports 1,173.8
- Imports 1,797.8
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13Net Domestic Product
Net Domestic Product, NDP GDP
depreciation Depreciation is value of the
capital stock used up each year, i.e. worn out
and/or obsolete. Net Investment Gross
investment depreciation For 2004 GDP
11,995 billion Depreciation 1,442 billion NDP
10,553 billion Net investment 486 billion
14Green GDP
- Accounts for depletion of natural and
environmental resources, in addition to
depreciation of physical capital - Green GDP GDP depreciation of fixed capital
depletion of natural and environmental resources - Evaluation of depletion is difficult because many
of these are public goods or unowned and
therefore are not marketed, do not have a market
price
15Disposable income
- Disposable income, DI is income available to
households after paying taxes and receiving
transfer payments - Net taxes, NT taxes - transfers
_____
16Disposable income
- DI GDP (taxes transfers) GDP NT
- 9,713.13 in 2004
17Nominal versus Real GDP
- Changes in prices affect GDP overtime
- As prices increase, nominal GDP will increase
even if aggregate output has not - Gives appearance of economic growth when there is
none
18Nominal versus Real GDP
- We will from now on distinguish between nominal
GDP and real GDP - Nominal GDP - GDP based on prices prevailing at
the time of the transaction also known as
current-dollar GDP - Real GDP - The economy's aggregate output
measured in dollars of constant purchasing power,
i.e. adjusted for changes in prices
19Nominal versus Real GDP
- Nominal GDP is converted to Real GDP using a
price index - Price index - A number that shows the average
price of a market basket of goods
20Nominal versus Real GDP
- Price index is created by comparing the price of
the basket in each year to the price of the
basket in a base year - Base year - The year with which other years are
compared when constructing an index the index
equals 100 in the base year
21Nominal versus Real GDP
- Example creating a price index
22Nominal versus Real GDP
- Using the price index to deflate nominal GDP
values - Real GDP Nominal GDP/(price index/100)
23Nominal versus Real GDP
- For 2002
- Nominal GDP 10442.1
- GDP deflator price index 110
- Real GDP 10442.1/(110/100)
- 9436.1
24Comparing real GDP- adjusting for differing
populations
- Economies with larger populations naturally tend
to have higher GDPs, e.g. China, India, Brazil - The standard of living depends not upon how much
stuff but on how much stuff there is per person
25Real GDP per capita
- Per capita per person
- Real GDP per capita real GDP/population
- if real GDP 12 trillion and population 300
million, - then Real GDP per capita 12 trillion/300
million 40,000
26Comparing real GDP
- To compare real GDP among different economies,
the values for GDP must be in a common unit of
account - The US is most frequently used as a common unit
of account
27Comparing real GDP- adjusting for differing
populations
- Economies with larger populations naturally tend
to have higher GDPs, e.g. China, India, Brazil - The standard of living depends not upon how much
stuff but on how much stuff there is per person
28Summary
- Nominal GDP C I G (X-M)
- NDP GDP depreciation
- Green GDP GDP depreciation of fixed capital
depletion of natural and environmental resources - Net taxes taxes transfers
- DI GDP Net taxes
- Real GDP Nominal GDP/(GDP deflator/100)
- Real GDP per capita real GDP/population