Title: Gross Domestic Product
1Gross Domestic Product
- How do you measure economic growth?
2Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
- Dollar Value of all new FINAL goods services
produced domestically over one year. - Currently 16.6 Trillion dollars
- Released quarterly by the Government (measured
by growth) - Recession Negative GDP growth for 2 consecutive
quarters - Historically U.S. GDP grows between 1 - 5
annually - Growth above 5 is considered too fast
- causes inflation
- Growth below 2 is considered too slow
- causes rising unemployment
3GDP growth by quarter (3months)
Slow GDP growth recovery from great recession
2.0
42 Ways to measure GDP
- Since every economic transaction has both a buyer
a seller gt there are 2 ways to measure GDP - GDP is the sum of all spending or all income
- 1) Expenditure Method add up all spending
- method used most of the time in AP Economics
- 2) Income Method add up all income (wages,
rent, interest profits)
52 methods of calculating GDP continued
GDP Total Income
GDP Total Expenditures
Spending
Revenue
Income
Flow of inputs
and outputs
Flow of dollars
6NOT included in GDP
Intermediate Goods Only FINAL goods counts
(must avoid double counting) Example
steel used to make a car does not count
count only value of the entire car (not parts)
- Non-market transactions
- If you call a plumber it counts. If you fix
your sink
It does not count
- Underground Economy
- illegal sale of goods (drugs), payments made
under the table, etc
- Financial Transactions
- only a transfer of assets
- Govt Transfer Payments
- Govt transfers to person or company
- Example welfare, social security, etc
- International goods
- Only goods produced in USA count
- Second hand sales
- only NEW sales count
7Expenditure Equation for GDP
GDP C I G (X-M)
New Capital Machinery New Construction Unsold
Inventories
8Worksheet GDP Analysis
GDP C I G (NX)
9Primary Use of GDP
- Objective way to keep score on economic
performance - Politicians monitor GDP figures to determine
Govt Policy - Federal Reserve also base their policy decisions
on GDP
10U.S. GDP in Comparison
- U.S. 16.0 Trillion
- Entire World 70.0 Trillion
- China 7.0 Trillion
- Japan 6.0 Trillion
- Germany 3.3 Trillion
- India 1.8 Trillion
-
11Per Capita GDP
- GDP divided by a countries population
- Illustrates the value of economic output per
person - Current Statistics
- USA 310,000,000 Million people
- GDP 15,600,000,000,000 Trillion dollars
- Per Capital GDP 50,000
12Global Perspective Per Capita GDP
- World 8,600
- Luxembourg 104,000
- Denmark 56,000
- U.S. 46,000
- England 36,000
- Japan 39,000
- China 3,700
- Bhutan 1,800
13GDP Per Capita
14What GDP does Not Measure
- The mix of products
- all goods treated equally Guns versus Food
- How goods are distributed
- Is wealth concentrated evenly?
- The Quality of goods
- New computers with more memory
15GDP and Quality of Life
- Does not measure Leisure Time
- Vacation Days in Europe vs. U.S.
- Work 80 hours instead of 40 hrs/week, GDP
increases - What about quality of life?