GDP PPoint
GDP PPoint
GDP PPoint
7
>> Tracking the
Macroeconomy
Krugman/Wells
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An Expanded Circular-Flow Diagram
Government purchases of
goods and services Government borrowing
Government
Households
Wages, profit,
interest, rent Borrowing and
GDP
stock issues by
firms
Firms
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The National Accounts
Households earn income via the factor markets from
wages, interest on bonds, dividends on stocks,
and rent on land.
A stock is a share in the ownership of a company
held by a shareholder.
A bond is borrowing in the form of an IOU that pays
interest.
In addition, households receive government
transfers from the government.
Disposable income, total household income minus
taxes, is available to spend on consumption or to
save.
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The National Accounts
Private savings, equal to disposable income
minus consumer spending, is disposable income
that is not spent on consumption.
The banking, stock, and bond markets, which
channel private savings and foreign lending into
investment spending, government borrowing, and
foreign borrowing, are known as the financial
markets.
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The National Accounts
Government purchases of goods and services
(G) is paid for by tax receipts as well as by
government borrowing.
Exports (X) generate an inflow of funds into the
country from the rest of the world, while imports
(IM) lead to an outflow of funds to the rest of the
world.
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The National Accounts
Inventories are stocks of goods and raw materials
held to facilitate business operations.
Investment spending is spending on productive
physical capital, such as machinery and construction
of structures, and on changes to inventories.
Final goods and services are goods and services
sold to the final, or end, user.
Intermediate goods and services are goods and
services—bought from one firm by another firm—
that are inputs for production of final goods and
services.
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Gross Domestic Product
Gross domestic product or GDP measures the
total value of all final goods and services produced
in the economy during a given year. It does not
include the value of intermediate goods.
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Calculating Gross Domestic Product
GDP can be calculated three ways:
Add up the value added of all producers
Add up all spending on domestically-produced
final goods and services. This results in the
equation: GDP = C + I + G + X - IM
Add up all income paid to factors of production
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PITFALLS
changes to inventories
Not Included
intermediate goods and services
inputs
used goods
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Calculating Gross Domestic Product
Components of GDP (billions of dollars)
$15,000
Value added by government Government purchases of goods
= 11.5% and services
= 19.4%
Value added by households
= 11.5%
Investment spending
10,000 = 15.4%
C+I+G
= $14,515
Value added by business
= 77.1% Consumer spending
5,000 = 70.3%
0
Value added by sector
Net exports X – IM = –$708 (–
5.1%)
Spending on domestically
-5,000 produced final goods and services
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►ECONOMICS IN ACTION
Creating the National Accounts
The national accounts owe their creation to the Great
Depression. All government officials had were scattered
statistics: railroad freight car loadings, stock prices, and
incomplete indexes of industrial production.
Simon Kuznets developed a set of national income
accounts. The first version of these accounts was presented
to Congress in 1937 and in a research report titled National
Income.
The push to complete the national accounts came during
World War II, when policy makers were in even more need
of comprehensive measures of the economy’s performance.
The federal government began issuing estimates of gross
domestic product and gross national product in 1942.
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
Real GDP is the total value of the final goods and
services produced in the economy during a given
year, calculated using the prices of a selected base
year.
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
Except in the base year, real GDP is not the same
as nominal GDP, output valued at current prices.
Chained dollars is the method of calculating
changes in real GDP using the average between
the growth rate calculated using an early base year
and the growth rate calculated using a late base
year.
GDP per capita is a measure of average GDP per
person, but is not by itself an appropriate policy
goal.
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
Year 1 Year 2
Quantity of apples (billions) 2,000 2,200
Price of apple $0.25 $0.30
Quantity of oranges (billions) 1,000 1,200
Price of orange $0.50 $0.70
GDP (billions of dollars) 1,000 1,500
Real GDP (billions of year 1 dollars) $1,000 $1,150
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
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Real vs. Nominal GDP
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GLOBAL
COMPARISON
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►ECONOMICS IN ACTION
Miracle in Venezuela?
The South American nation of Venezuela has a distinction
that may surprise you: in recent years, it has had one of the
world’s fastest-growing nominal GDPs. Between 1997 and
2007, Venezuelan nominal GDP grew by an average of 28%
each year—much faster than nominal GDP in the United
States or even in booming economies like China.
So is Venezuela experiencing an economic miracle?
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►ECONOMICS IN ACTION
Miracle in Venezuela?
No, it’s just suffering from unusually high inflation.
Nominal GDP
(billions of bolivars),
Real GDP (billions of
1997 bolivars)
VEB500,000
400,000
300,000
200,000
100,000
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Price Indexes and the Aggregate Price Level
The aggregate price level is a measure of the
overall level of prices in the economy.
To measure the aggregate price level, economists
calculate the cost of purchasing a market basket.
A price index is the ratio of the current cost of that
market basket to the cost in a base year, multiplied
by 100.
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Market Baskets and Price Indexes
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Inflation Rate, CPI, and other Indexes
The inflation rate is the yearly percentage change
in a price index, typically based upon Consumer
Price Index, or CPI, the most common measure of
the aggregate price level.
The consumer price index, or CPI, measures the
cost of the market basket of a typical urban
American family.
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Consumer Price Index
Apparel
Motor fuel 4%
7%
Transportation
13%
Medical care
5% Housing
40%
Recreation
5%
Food and
Education and beverages
communication 16%
Other goods
6%
and services
4%
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FOR INQUIRING MINDS
5.5
5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
3.0
2.5
2.0
1913 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
2007
Year
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Other Price Measures
A similar index to CPI for goods purchased by firms
is the producer price index.
Economists also use the GDP deflator, which
measures the price level by calculating the ratio of
nominal to real GDP.
The GDP deflator for a given year is 100 times the
ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP in that year.
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The CPI, the PPI, and the GDP Deflator
Percent change in
CPI, PPI, GDP
deflator
25%
20
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
-15
-20
1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2007
Year
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►ECONOMICS IN ACTION
Indexing to the CPI
The CPI has a direct and immediate impact on millions of
Americans. The reason is that many payments are tied, or
“indexed,” to the CPI—the amount paid rises or falls when
the CPI rises or falls.
Today, 48 million people receive checks from Social
Security. The amount of an individual’s check is determined
by a formula that reflects his or her previous payments into
the system as well as other factors. In addition, all Social
Security payments are adjusted each year to offset any
increase in consumer prices over the previous year. The CPI
is used to calculate the official estimate of the inflation rate
used to adjust these payments yearly.
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SUMMARY
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SUMMARY
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SUMMARY
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SUMMARY
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The End of Chapter 7
coming attraction:
Chapter 8:
Unemployment and Inflation
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