National Income
National Income
National Income
National Income:
National Income is the monetary value of the flow of goods and services produced by
the economy during the year, after indirect taxes.
In other words, it is the amount of all products (apples, chairs, computers, hotels, and T-
shirts) that any society produces using its land, labor, physical capital and human
capital. It is equal to the sum of money values of all consumption and investment goods,
along with government purchases.
GDP, GNP and NNP
1. Gross Domestic Product (GDP):
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the market value of all the products, goods and services,
which are produced within a country during a selected time (commonly in the country’s
financial year).
GDP = C + I + G + (X-M)
Where:
Three approaches:
2. Income approach
3. Expenditure approach
1. Product/ output approach
Product approach: The total value of final goods and services produced during the year.
The term “final” goods and services relates to those that are consumed. It does not include
components or capital goods which are termed intermediate goods.
This method finds National Income by adding the net values of all production that has taken
place in all sectors during a given period.
The net values of production of all the industries and sectors of the economy plus the net
income from abroad give us the Gross National Product (GNP).
Subtracting the total amount of deprecation of the assets used in production, from the figure
of GNP, gives National Income.
This approach measures the output from an economy.
Example: Bread
In measuring the value of bread in an economy, one could measure the product
value of the grain (Rs.50/kg), then the flour (Rs.75/kg), then the final loaf of
bread (Rs.100/kg). When calculating all the output, an economist could add
up the value of the farmer’s product (grain), and then the miller’s product
(flour), and then the baker’s product (bread).
Doing so would have the value of the product as Rs.225/kg for bread, however
this means the value of the products has been “double counted”, as the final
value is only Rs.100/kg.
The value of the baker’s work is taking flour, and turning it into bread. The
miller takes the grain from the farmer and turns it into flour. If we count the
value of the bread, this already takes into account the value of the farmer and
the miller, and prevents “double counting”.
2. Income approach
Income approach: The total value of all the incomes earned from producing goods and
services during the year.
This method measures the National Income after it has been distributed and appears as
income earned or received by individuals of the country.
This method estimates National Income by adding up the rent of land, wages of employees,
interest and profit on capital and income of self-employed people.
Illustration: Income approach
Rs.
Expenditure approach: The total value of expenditure on purchasing final goods and
services during the year.
The expenditure approach involves counting the expenditure in the economy on goods and
service, by different groups of people.
These groups were identified in the original definition of GDP as Consumption, Investment,
Government Spending, Exports and Imports.
This is measured by adding up the expenditure that has happened in the country, and
includes: household consumption, government expenditure on consumables, export
demand.
Conclusion
Circular flow of income
There are a number of ways of measuring the national income of a country, which
should theoretically result in the same figure. In practice there are often
imperfections in how it can be measured so several methods are used to get a
better understanding of what the actual number might be.
The diagram above shows how all three methods
should equate to the same amount, as all of
them are showing the same value at different
stages within the economy. For example, all of
the expenditure that households have will be
equal to the incomes that firms pay to those
households, and the value of the output that
firms produce.
The circle, however, is not wholly continuous.
There can be withdrawals and injections into the flow at various junctures.
Circular flow of income
Withdrawals include:
• Savings: Households save an element of their income thus reducing
consumption.
• Taxation: Amounts required by the government reduce households’ ability to
spend.
• Imports: Purchases from abroad result in money leaving the circle.
Injections include:
• Investments: This is a form of spending on future output in addition to
expenditure.
• Government spending: Funds spent by governments inject money to the circle.
• Exports: Sales to abroad result in an injection to the circle.
Flow of national income – Short term and
long term
In a national economy there are three withdrawals from and three injections into the circular
flow of national income.
Withdrawals from the national income flows are: savings (A), Taxes (T) and Imports (M) and
Injections into the circular flow of national income are: Investment expenditures by firms (I),
Government expenditures (G) and Exports (X).
National income equilibrium is reached not only by the equality of aggregate demand and
aggregate supply but also the planned withdrawals from the flows of national income must
also be equal to planned injections into the circular flow of national income i.e.
withdrawals = Injections or
S+T+M=I+G+X