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Topic 2 - Measuring a Nation’s Income. Understanding Stocks and Flows The distinction between a stock and a flow is very important. A stock is a position.

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Presentation on theme: "Topic 2 - Measuring a Nation’s Income. Understanding Stocks and Flows The distinction between a stock and a flow is very important. A stock is a position."— Presentation transcript:

1 Topic 2 - Measuring a Nation’s Income

2 Understanding Stocks and Flows The distinction between a stock and a flow is very important. A stock is a position at a moment of time. (Wealth) A flow is the rate of change in a stock, for example, the changes in your income over a year. If the bath tub is filling up, the stock is rising. 2

3 Gross Domestic Product GDP Defined GDP or gross domestic product is the market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a given time period. This definition has four parts: o Market value o Final goods and services o Produced within a country o In a given time period Excludes financial transactions and income transfers since these do not reflect production. Net additions to inventory are current period output so are also included. 3

4 Gross Domestic Product Market Value o GDP is a market value—goods and services are valued at their market prices. o To add apples and oranges, computers and popcorn, we add the market values so we have a total value of output in dollars. 4

5 Gross Domestic Product Final Goods and Services GDP is the value of the final goods and services produced. A final good (or service) is an item bought by its final user during a specified time period. A final good contrasts with an intermediate good, which is an item that is produced by one firm, bought by another firm, and used as a component of a final good or service. We avoid counting the same value more than once. 5

6 Gross Domestic Product Produced Within a Country GDP measures production within a country—domestic production. In a Given Time Period GDP measures production during a specific time period, normally a year or a quarter of a year. o Gross National Product (GNP) is the total market value of final goods and services produced during a given period by the citizens of a country no matter where they live. The goods and services are produced by the “nationals” of the country. 6

7 7 Three alternative methods to measure GDP 1.The Production or Value Added Method: The sum of the value of all goods and services produced by industries in the economy in a year minus the cost of goods and services used in production – leaving the value added. 2.The Expenditure Method: The sum of the total expenditure on goods and services by households, investors, government and net exporters (exports minus imports). 3.The Income Method: The sum of the income generated by resources used in the production of goods and services (includes the sum of wages, salaries and supplements plus rent, interest, profit and dividends).

8 8 VALUE ADDED in a Five-Stage Production Process

9 9 Expenditure versus Income Approach

10 10 GDP as Expenditure GDP is the sum of the amount each sector (households, investors, governments, and foreigners) spends on final user goods and services. There are four components of GDP: o personal consumption expenditures (C), o gross private domestic investment (I), o government purchases (G) of goods and services, and, o net exports (NX) = ( exports - imports ) GDP = C + I + G + NX

11 Personal Consumption Consumer Durables Durable has a life of over 3 years: cars, furniture, etc Consumer Non-Durables Goods with a life of less than three years: food, utilities, clothing Services Housing, healthcare, recreation, education 11

12 12 Net Investment

13 Investment: Adding to the Capital Stock Flows and Stocks o A stock is a quantity: capital, inventories and wealth are stock variables o A flow is an addition to or a subtraction from a stock: Investment and income are flow variables Investment in National Stocks o Residential Investment (homes) o Non-residential Investment (business investments in structures and equipment) o Changes in Inventories (changes get registered) 13

14 Governmen t Government Expenditures reflect direct consumption, not transfers Defense, Government investments in roads and other infrastructure, government services such as Department of Motor Vehicles. Police and fire are expenditures. Transfer payments represent money redistributed from one group of citizens (taxpayers) to another (poor, unemployed, elderly). 14

15 Government While transfers are included in government budgets as outlays they are not purchases of currently produced goods and services. o Does not result in production of new goods and services o Does not included in government purchases or in GDP Examples: Social Security, Government Health Care and Interest payments on national debt 15

16 External Accounts Imports (M): Product Accounts: Goods and Services Exports (X): Product Accounts: Goods and Services Net Exports = NX = X – M If NX = X – M > 0 Trade Surplus If NX = X – M < 0 Trade Deficit Here are some examples of exports of services Spending of foreign tourists in Vietnam transportation services insurance / banking services retail services (souvenirs) hotel accommodation services 16

17 17 Example: Expenditure Approach

18 18 GDP Components Vietnam http://mecometer.com/infographic/vietnam/gdp-composition-breakdown/

19 Measuring GDP Nominal GDP and Real GDP o Real GDP is the value of final goods and services produced in a given year when valued at valued at the prices of a reference base year. o Currently, the reference base year is selected by the government and we call that that base year. W describe real GDP as measured in base year dollars or dong. o Nominal GDP is the value of goods and services produced during a given year valued at the prices that prevailed in that same year. o Nominal GDP is just a more precise name for GDP. 19

20 Calculating Real and Nominal GDP Example 20

21 21 Calculating Real and Nominal GDP Exercise

22 22 GDP Deflator The GDP deflator is a measure of the price level calculated as the ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP times 100: It tells us the rise in nominal GDP that is attributable to a rise in prices rather than a rise in the quantities produced Nominal GDP Real GDP GDP Deflator = x 100

23 The Uses and Limitations of Real GDP Limitations of Real GDP o Real GDP measures the value of goods and services that are bought in markets. o Some of the factors that influence the standard of living and that are not part of GDP are o Household production o Underground economic activity o Health and life expectancy o Leisure time o Environmental quality o Political freedom and social justice 23

24 Business Cycles An expansion is a period during which real GDP increases—from a trough to a peak. Recession is a period during which real GDP decreases—its growth rate is negative for at least two successive quarters. 24


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