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Gross Domestic Product

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Presentation on theme: "Gross Domestic Product"— Presentation transcript:

1 Gross Domestic Product
Rev 5/19

2 Business cycle and GDP

3 Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
The measures were developed in the 1930’s. Originally the Gross National Product (GNP) was used. Since the 1990’s the GDP has been the official measure. The GDP is measured quarterly.

4 GDP Gross-total before adjustments.
National-Production owned by U.S companies Domestic-production in the U.S, even if foreign owned.

5 GDP GDP defined is the total value of all final goods and services produced in a given year. It includes all goods and services citizen or foreign supplied in the USA. GDP measurement is a monetary amount Why? As the GDP of an economy increases, we have economic growth, and is a tracking of long term economic growth. Limitations: does not measure quality of life, leisure time, crime, economic variables.

6 There are Three ways to calculate the GDP
The Income approach: W+R+I+P+Sa=GDP W=wages, compensation R=rents, lease payments I=interest, savings and bond payments P=profits, corporate income tax, dividends and undistributed corporate profits Sa=statistical adjustments-Indirect business taxes(sales, excise, property, customs, licenses, duties), consumption of fixed capital(CFC) is depreciation, net foreign income.

7 There are Three ways to calculate the GDP
The expenditure approach: C+Ig+G+Xn=GDP C=personal consumption of finished goods and services Ig=gross private business investment, construction of new houses, factory equipment G=government Xn=net foreign factor of trade (exports-imports) if Xn is negative, a trade deficit exists

8 There are three ways to calculate the GDP
Value Added approach: In this approach at each stage of the production process we subtract the cost of inputs(the intermediate goods) at that stage. In other words—the difference between the value of its sales and the value of the inputs it purchases from other businesses

9 Here’s all three ways in one table

10 What is not counted? Expenditure approach
Used goods, secondhand sales Gifts, transfer payments(social security, welfare, veterans payments) Stock equity and securities purchased. Unreported business activities done for cash. Illegal, black market activities. Financial transactions between banks and business “intermediate goods” ‘non-market’ activities-volunteer or family work. We only want to count things once!!!!!!!!

11 Fluctuations in the GDP
Leakages are uses of household income not used for consumption in the GDP. Leakages are losses of $$$$ Leakages include: Taxes-government Saving Imports-income created by one economy to purchase output form another.

12 Fluctuations in the GDP
Injections (money into economy) are expenditures by either: Government, Business or foreign sectors on domestic goods and services. This includes exports which inject money (when the dollar is weak on the world market, exports increase because American goods are cheaper.) The government can spend the taxes it collects by making government purchases. Business spends profits on investment, but can retain some profits and capital consumption for later use.

13 What’s the GDP Investment-$100 Consumer spending-$50 Wages-$150 Government-$200 Imports-$100 Exports-$50 Rent-$25

14 Nominal vs Real GDP Anything nominal has inflation added
Real has no inflation. Today we pay real prices, costs Formula to calculate nominal vs real GDP Nominal GDP X 100=real GDP Price Index

15 GDP Deflator Nominal GDP x 100=GDP Deflator Real GDP Why do we deflate the GDP? is a price index that measures price inflation or deflation, and is calculated using nominal GDP and real GDP.

16

17 GDP Growth Annually Current year real GDP-GDP Previous year x 100 Previous Year GDP 2017-GDP $ GDP $480


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