GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT The market value of all goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. It can be measured as all the EXPENDITURES.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ECO Global Macroeconomics
Advertisements

The Circular Flow Model
Principles Of Macroeconomics
The Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure
Chapter 7: Savings and Investment
Lesson 6-1 Measuring Total Output and Income. Measuring Total Output Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is a number that measures the total output of a country.
Circular Flow and Gross Domestic Product
Tracking the U.S. Economy
Chapter 7: Savings and Investment
Economics 202 Principles Of Macroeconomics
Chapter 7: Savings and Investment
5 MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER.
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The market value of all final goods and.
N. Lerzan Özkale BOP Lerzan Özkale. N. Lerzan Özkale BALANCE OF PAYMENTS (BOP) The record of a country’s transactions in goods, services and assets with.
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The value of all final goods and services.
Outline 1.Measurement of GDP 2.Savings, wealth and capital 3.Nominal and real GDP and price indices 4.Labor market measurement.
The National Income Accounts
24 FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
Chapter 2 The Measurement and Structure of the Canadian Economy Economics 282 University of Alberta.
Chapter 2 Measuring the Economy.
5 MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER.
20 Measuring GDP and Economic Growth
10 Measuring GDP and Economic Growth CHAPTER
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Define GDP and explain why the value of production,
Income and Expenditure
Module The relationship between savings and investment spending 2. The purpose of the 5 principal types of financial assets: stocks, bonds, loans,
Chapter 2 The Measurement and Structure of the Canadian Economy Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc.
Chapter 7: Savings and Investment Objectives Determinants of saving, investment, and interest rates Effect of government budget deficits Effect of international.
Balance of Payments 3/2/2012 Unit 3: Exchange Rates.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2002 Week 8 Introduction to macroeconomics.
Measuring the Economy. The Economy as a Circular Flow Resources FirmsHouseholds Goods and Services Expenditures Income.
Expenditure Approach National Income Accounting. Two Methods of Calculating GDP There are two methods of calculating GDP: the expenditure approach and.
5 CHAPTER Measuring GDP and Economic Growth.
Circular Flow in Economics
Alomar_1111 Chapter 7: Measuring Domestic Output, National Income, and Price Level.
5 MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER.
Learning Objectives: Measuring the Economy LO1: Understand the circular flow of national income LO2: Explain the concept of equilibrium and why national.
Chapter 12 Supplementary Notes. GNP = Expenditure on a Country’s Goods and Services Y = C d + I d + G d + EX = (C-C f ) + (I-I f ) + (G-G f ) + EX = C.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) What is Gross Domestic Product and how we measure it? Why is this measure important? What are the definitions of the major.
24 FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12 CHAPTER Financial Markets © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Describe the flow of funds through financial.
Income and Spending: The Circular Flow Ways to Measure GDP Circular Flow.
© 2011 Pearson Education The U.S. and Global Economies 2 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Describe what, how,
7 FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT © 2014 Pearson Addison-Wesley After studying this chapter, you will be able to:  Describe the flow of funds in financial.
Module 10 Mar  It is a diagram of a simplified representation of the macro-economy.  National income and product accounts or national accounts.
Modeling the Economy. Actors: 1. Consumers 2. Financial Institutions 3. Businesses 4. The Government 5. The Foreign Sector.
AAEC 2305 Fundamentals of Agricultural and Applied Economics Shaikh M Rahman Associate Professor, AAEC Ag. Science 307A Tel: (806)
1 of 37 Chapter: 7 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Circular Flow & GDP.
2.4 CIRCULAR FLOWS Circular flow model
Circular Flow of Income
12 CHAPTER Financial Markets © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Describe the flow of funds through financial.
Introduction to Macroeconomics “The study of of a national economy”
The National Accounts Chapter 7-1. What you will learn in this chapter: How economists use aggregate measures to track the performance of the economy.
© 2011 Pearson Education Global Economy- the circular flow model 2 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Describe what,
Product Market HouseholdFirms Resource Market Government.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Define GDP and explain why the value of production,
5 Measuring GDP and Economic Growth
1  To define the terms in the Circular flow of income  Explain the inter-relationship between expenditure, income and production  To explain why injections.
24 FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
Saving investment spending And financial system.  Savings and Investment Spending Identity  Saving and investment spending are always equal for the.
© 2013 Pearson 2.3 THE CIRCULAR FLOWS Circular flow model is a model of the economy that shows: The circular flow of expenditures and incomes that result.
Market system, circular flow and GDP Market System (Chapter 2) Circular Flow Model (Chapter 2) GDP (Chapter 5) Nominal GDP and Real GDP (Chapter 5)
The Circular Flow of Income. The circular flow of income Here is what you should already know: the circular flow of ALL markets is characterized by the.
Dolan, Economics Combined Version 4e, Ch. 18 Survey of Economics Edwin G. Dolan and Kevin Klein Best Value Textbooks 4 th edition Chapter 8 The Circular.
Section 3 Module 10.
August 30 , 2016 Good morning/afternoon 
Circular Flow.
Circular Flow and GDP C H E C K L I S T
Gross Domestic Product
Presentation transcript:

GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT The market value of all goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. It can be measured as all the EXPENDITURES to buy the goods and services produced. It can also be measured as all the INCOME earned from producing the goods and services. Since every dollar spent is someone’s income, the two measures give the same result.

Gross Domestic Product »The circular flow diagram shows the transactions among households, firms, governments, and the rest of the world.

Gross Domestic Product Firms hire factors of production from households. The blue flow, Y, shows total income paid by firms to households.

Gross Domestic Product –Households buy consumer goods and services. The red flow, C, shows consumption expenditures.

Gross Domestic Product Households save, S, and pay taxes, T. Firms borrow some of what households save to finance their investment.

Gross Domestic Product –Firms buy capital goods from other firms. The red flow I represents this investment expenditure by firms.

Gross Domestic Product –Governments buy goods and services, G, and borrow or repay debt if spending exceeds or is less than taxes

Gross Domestic Product The rest of the world buys goods and services from us, X and sells us goods and services, M—net exports are X - M

Gross Domestic Product And the rest of the world borrows from us or lends to us depending on whether net exports are positive or negative.

Gross Domestic Product –The blue and red flows are the circular flow of income and expenditure. The green flows are borrowing, lending, and taxes.

Gross Domestic Product The sum of the red flows equals the blue flow.

Gross Domestic Product –That is: Y = C + I + G + X - M

Expenditures Expenditures are purchases of goods and services. Expenditures are –Consumption (C) –Investment (I) –Government spending (on goods and services) (G) –Net Exports (X-M) Exports (X) Imports (M)

Expenditures equal Income Expenditures= C + I + G + X – M All expenditures become someone’s income so Y (income) = C + I + G + X – M

Government Government spending: –Goods and services (G) Roads, health care, education, helicopters, police officers salaries, judges salaries. Government revenue: –Taxes –(Income from Crown corporations) –(Tariffs) –Less Transfers to persons (part of net taxes) GST rebates, unemployment insurance, pensions, subsidies Interest on the debt (substantial) NOTE: The gov’t is not buying services, so transfers are not an expenditure.

Budgetary Deficits and Surpluses Spending –Goods and services (G) + Transfers to persons (Tr) Revenue –Taxes (Tx) Net Taxes –Tx – Tr = NT Surplus  G + Tr < Tx  G < Tx – Tr  G < NT Deficit  G + Tr > Tx  G > Tx – Tr  G > NT

Savings and Investment Investment is financed by savings Savings have three sources: –Savings by households The part of income households do not spend on consumption or net taxes. (S = Y - C - NT) –Savings by governments NT – G = savings –Savings of foreigners M – X = foreign borrowing

STOCKS AND FLOWS FLOWS –Income : the goods and services produced each year –Deficits: The excess of spending over income each year –Investment: Goods produced to be used in production each year –Surpluses: The excess of revenue over expenditures each year. STOCKS –Wealth: All the goods a person owns. Wealth is the sum of past net saving. –Debt: the sum of all past deficits less all past surpluses –Capital: All the investment goods owned. Capital is the sum of past net investment