An activity for “The ABCs of GDP”

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Presentation transcript:

An activity for “The ABCs of GDP” WHAT’S IN GDP? An activity for “The ABCs of GDP”

What is gross domestic product (GDP)? Currency value (such as U.S. dollar) of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period Total income of a nation Measure of nation’s economic well-being Measure of a nation’s economic growth from one period to the next

What’s included in GDP? Consumption by households Goods: groceries, clothes, iPods Services: haircuts, oil changes Consumption (C) is the expenditure by households on consumption goods and services. It includes durables (goods lasting three or more years), nondurables, and services.

What’s included in GDP? Investment by businesses and households Fixed assets for production New homes Inventories Investment (I) is the purchase of new capital goods (tools, instruments, machines, buildings, and other constructions) and additions to inventories. In other words, it is spending by firms, including final purchases on machinery, equipment and tools, all construction of new houses, buildings, and apartments, and additions to inventory.

What’s included in GDP? Government expenditures by local, state, and federal government Roads and schools Government purchases of goods and services (G) are purchases of goods and services by all levels of government. It excludes transfer payments (welfare spending and unemployment compensation) because those payments do not represent new products or services; rather, they are transfers of income.

What’s included in GDP? Net exports Value of a country’s exports to other nations, less its imports from other nations Net exports of goods and services (X-IM or NX) is the value of exports of goods and services minus the value of imports of goods and services. In the United States, it is the value by which American spending on foreign goods and services exceeds foreign spending on American goods and services.

What’s included in GDP? GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government spending + Net exports GDP is equal to all of the spending by households, businesses, government, and the international sector on final goods. It is also the dollar value of the nation’s goods and services produced in a given period within the nation’s borders.

What are the components of GDP? Personal Consumption Expenditures (C) Investment (I) Government (G) Net Exports (NX) Fixed Investment Inventories Exports Imports Nonresidential Residential Expenditures on final goods and services are divided into four types: consumption, investment, government purchases, and net exports (exports – imports) of goods and services. GDP = C + I + G + NX

What’s not included in GDP? Intermediate goods Used goods Underground production (black market) Financial transactions Household production Transfer payments Intermediate goods. Only the final goods and services purchased for final use and not for resale or further processing and manufacturing are included in GDP. Intermediate goods are not counted in GDP. Intermediate goods are goods and services that are used for further processing and manufacturing or resale, for example, the lead that will eventually go in a pencil. This process avoids double-counting and therefore exaggerating GDP. Goods produced but not sold do go into GDP in the form of inventory investment. After that, they are not included in the GDP of the year in which they are sold. Second-hand sales/used goods. Expenditure on used goods is not part of GDP because these goods were part of GDP in the period in which they were produced and during which time they were new goods. Buying a house that is not new is not part of GDP. Also, bartered goods are not included in GDP. The black market/underground production. Illegal drugs, illegal goods, and illegal services in the underground economy are not part of GDP. The hidden part of the economy in which people trade in illegal goods and services and try to avoid taxes and regulations cannot be correctly ascertained. Financial transactions. When households buy financial assets such as bonds and stocks, they are making loans, not buying goods and services. Nothing new has been produced. Transfer payments. Transfer payments are payments from the government, including education grants, Social Security payments, welfare checks, and unemployment checks. They do alter household income, but they do not reflect the economy’s production.

How much of GDP is each component? Average Percent of GDP since 2003 Component % of GDP Government 19% Investment 16% Consumption (PCE) 70 % The chart shows the average percent since 2003 of GDP for each component of GDP. Consumption is the highest proportion of GDP, at 70%. Government spending accounts for 19% of GDP on average, and investment, 16%. Net exports have averaged -5%. Since imports have exceeded exports, net exports has been a drag on GDP. Changes to components of real GDP will change the overall level of real GDP. Calculated using data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA): www.bea.gov Net Exports -5% GDP 100% Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis

What GDP does not tell us Does not measure income distribution Does not measure non-monetary output or transactions (e.g., barter, household activities) Does not take into account desirable externalities, such as leisure or environment Does not measure social well-being Correlates to standard of living but is not a measure of standard of living