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Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER 2 Measuring the Aggregate Economy The government is very keen on amazing statistics…They collect them,

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER 2 Measuring the Aggregate Economy The government is very keen on amazing statistics…They collect them,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist 1 CHAPTER 2 Measuring the Aggregate Economy The government is very keen on amazing statistics…They collect them, add them, raise them to the n th power, take the cube root and prepare wonderful diagrams. But you must never forget that every one of these figures comes in the first instance from the village watchman, who just puts down what he damn pleases. — Sir Josiah Stamp (head of Britain’s revenue department in the late 19 th century) CHAPTER 25 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

2 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-2 Aggregate Accounting  Aggregate accounting (or national income accounting) is a set of rules and definitions for measuring economic activity in the economy as a whole  Aggregate accounting is a way of measuring total, or aggregate production, expenditures, and income  Gross domestic product (GDP) is the total market value of all final goods and services produced in an economy in a one-year period

3 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-3 The Components of GDP  GDP is divided into four expenditure categories: 1.Consumption (C) is spending by households on goods an services 2.Investment (I) is spending for the purpose of additional production 3.Government spending (G) is goods and services that government buys 4.Net exports is spending on exports (X) minus spending on imports (M)

4 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-4 The Components of GDP  Since all production is categorized into one of these four divisions, by adding up these four categories, we get total production of U.S. goods and services GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government spending + Net exports GDP = C + I + G + (X-M)

5 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-5 Expenditure Breakdown of GDP CountryGDP (billions $) = C (%) + I (%) + G (%) + X (%) - I (%) U.S.$15,07671122014 -18 Belgium 42553242185 -83 Czech Republic 27550242175 - 71 Germany 3,20557182050 - 45 Japan 4,3265920 15 - 14 Mexico 1,64566241230 - 32 Poland 81461201845 - 44

6 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-6 GDP Measures Final Output  GDP does not measure total transactions in the economy  It counts final output, but not intermediate goods Final output is goods and services purchased for final use Intermediate products are used as an input in the production of some other product  Counting the sale of both final and intermediate goods would result in double counting

7 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-7 Gross and Net Concepts  Net domestic product is GDP adjusted for depreciation, Depreciation is the amount of capital used up in producing that year’s GDP NDP measures output available for purchase NDP = C + I + G + (X-M) – depreciation  Net Investment is gross investment minus depreciation

8 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-8 National and Domestic Concepts  GDP is the total value of all final goods and services produced in an economy in a one-year period GDP is output produced within a country’s borders  Gross National Product (GNP) is the aggregate final output of citizens and businesses of an economy in one year GNP is output produced by a country’s citizens GNP = GDP + Net foreign factor income  Net foreign factor income is the income from foreign domestic factor sources minus foreign factor income earned domestically

9 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-9 Real GDP, Nominal GDP and Price Indices  Nominal GDP is GDP calculated at current prices  The GDP deflator is a price index Real GDP = Nominal GDP GDP deflator X 100GDP deflator = Nominal GDP Real GDP X 100  Real GDP is nominal GDP adjusted for inflation

10 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-10 Real GDP, Nominal GDP and Price Indices  Example: GDP rises from $8 trillion to $10 trillion.  Nominal GDP rises by:  If prices have risen by 20%, Real GDP has risen by: $10 trillion - $8 trillion $8 trillion $2 trillion $8 trillion = X 100 = 25% $10 trillion 120 X 100 = $8.3 trillion

11 1 Measuring the Aggregate Economy 25 25-11 Other Real and Nominal Distinctions  Nominal interest rate is the rate you pay or receive to borrow or lend money  Real interest rate is the nominal interest rate adjusted for inflation Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate – Inflation rate


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