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What is GDP?

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Title: What is GDP?


1
What is GDP? What is not GDP? Why do we need to
know the GDP?
2
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP)
  • The market value of all final goods and
    services produced in the economy in a given year.
  • Take all final goods and services produced
  • Multiply them times their respective prices
  • Add up all the totals.

3
GDP
  • Two interconnected sides
  • Output -- Firms produce output
  • for example, a computer manufacturer produces
    new computers.
  • Income -- When firms produce output, they also
    generate income wages rents interest
  • profit.

4
TOTAL MARKET VALUE
  • Take the quantity of goods produced and multiply
    them by their respective prices and add up the
    totals.
  • -- Example If an economy produced two cars at
    15,000 a car and three computers at 3,000 a
    computer, the total value of these goods and
    services would be
  • ( 2 15,000 ) ( 3 3,000 ) 39,000

5
FINAL GOODS AND SERVICES
  • Those goods and services that are sold to
    ultimate or final purchasers.

6
WHAT IS NOT INCLUDED IN GDP
  • 1) Intermediate Products
  • Tires on a Car. A part of the final product.
  • 2) Secondhand Sales
  • The sale of used goods.
  • 3) The underground economy
  • Services performed in the home, such as,
    cleaning, cooking and providing free child care
  • Transactions which occur that are not reported to
    official authorities -- these may be legal or
    illegal
  • IRS estimates that about 100 billion in income
    escapes federal taxes each year

7
WHAT IS INCLUDED IN GDP
  • GDPCIGXn (F)
  • Consumption Expenditures
  • Private Investment
  • Government Purchases
  • Net Exports Exports - Import

8
WHO PURCHASES GOODS AND SERVICES ?
  • GDP Consumption Private Government
    Net
  • Expenditures Investment
    Purchases Exports
    Expenditures
  • Purchases Consumers Firms Federal,
    state foreign and local
    sector governments exports
    minus
    imports
  • 7,297 4,965 1,067 1,366
    - 101 billion billion
    billion billion billion
  • Keynes Output-Expenditure Model GDPCIGF.
  • Consider that the U.S. population is 255 million
    people, GDP per person is approximately 28,600.

9
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
  • Durable Goods -- Those goods which last for a
    longer period of time, such as automobiles and
    refrigerators
  • Nondurable goods -- Those goods which last for
    short periods of time, such as food
  • Services -- Reflect work done in which people
    play a prominent role in delivery, such as a
    dentist filling a cavity.

10
PRIVATE INVESTMENT EXPENDITURES
  • Structures
  • Spending on new plants and equipment during the
    year
  • Newly produced housing
  • Additions to the stock of inventories
  • Gross Investment -- The total of new investment
  • Depreciation -- The deterioration or wearing out
    of existing plants, equipment and housing
  • Net investment -- Gross Investment minus
    depreciation.

11
GOVERNMENT PURCHASES
  • Purchases of newly produced goods and services by
    federal, state, and local governments
  • It includes any goods the government purchases
    plus the wages and benefits of all government
    workers
  • The majority of spending in this category
    actually comes from state and local governments.

12
TRANSFER PAYMENTS
  • Not included in the category of government
    purchases.
  • Funds paid to individuals not associated with the
    production of goods and services It includes
    payments for
  • social security
  • welfare
  • interest on government debt
  • In 1995, approximately two-thirds of federal
    government expenditures were transfer payments.

13
NET EXPORTS
  • Purchases of foreign goods by consumers, firms
    and the government are subtracted when we
    calculate GDP because these goods were not
    produced in the U.S.
  • We must add to GDP any goods produced in the U.S.
    and sold abroad.
  • Trade Deficit -- Occurs when we buy more goods
    from abroad than we sell
  • Trade Surplus -- Occurs when our exports exceed
    our imports

14
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15
REALITY PRINCIPLE
  • What matters to people is the real value or
    purchasing power of money or income, not its face
    value.


16
REAL GDP
  • A measure of GDP that controls for price
    changes.

17
NOMINAL GDP
  • GDP that is measured using current prices
  • It can increase for one of two reasons
  • Production of goods and services has increased
  • The prices of the goods and services has increased

18
GDP EXAMPLE
  • YEAR 1 YEAR 2
  • Production 10 computers 12
    computers
  • Price 1,000 1,100
  • Nominal GDP in year 1 is 10,000
  • (10 1,000) 10,000
  • Nominal GDP in year 2 is 13,200
  • (12 1,100) 13,200
  • Real GDP in year 1 is 10,000
  • (10 1,000) 10,000
  • Real GDP in year 2 is 12,000
  • (12 1,000) 12,000

19
Real GDP 1992
U.S. REAL GDP, 1930 - 1995
8,000
Source U.S. Department of Commerce
6,000
4,000
2,000
0
1930
1935
194 0
1945
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1975
1980
1985
1990
YEAR
20
U.S. REAL GDP
  • The data for real GDP control for changes in
    prices and thus capture movements in real output
    only
  • Real GDP has grown substantially over the period
    graphed
  • This is what economists term economic growth
  • sustained increases in real production of an
    economy over a period of time
  • Differences in economic growth between countries
    and changes in economic growth over time are
    among the most important issues of macroeconomics

21
GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT GNP
  • Add to GDP any income earned abroad by U.S. firms
    or residents
  • Subtract any income earned in the United States
    by foreign firms or residents.

22
NET NATIONAL PRODUCT
  • Obtain GNP from GDP
  • Subtract depreciation from GNP

23
NATIONAL INCOME
  • The income that flows to the private sector
  • To get National Income, economists make
    adjustments to GDP
  • -- obtain Net National Product
  • add income earned abroad by U.S. firms
    or residents
  • subtract income earned in the U.S. by
    foreign firms or residents
  • subtract depreciation
  • -- subtract indirect taxes, which are sales or
    excise taxes on products.

24
FROM GDP TO NATIONAL INCOME
Gross Domestic Product 7,297 Plus
net income earned from abroad Gross National
Product 7,281 minus
depreciation Net National
Product 6,452 minus indirect
taxes (and other adjustments)
National Income 5,845 Source Economic
Report of the President (Washington, DC U.S.
Government Printing Office, 1996)
25
COMPOSITION OF U.S. NATIONAL INCOME
National Income 5,845 Compensation
of employees 4,233 Corporate
profits 614 Rental income
118 Proprietors income
480 Net Interest 400 Source
Economic Report of the President Washington, DC
Government Printing Office, 1996
26
VALUE ADDED
  • Value added of a firm is the sum of all income
    (wages, profits, rents, and interest) that it
    generates
  • By adding up the value added for all firms in the
    economy (plus nonprofit and governmental
    organizations), national income can be
    calculated
  • Value added for a typical firm is measured by
    starting with its total sales and subtracting the
    value of any inputs it purchases from other
    firms.

27
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX (CPI)
  • Widely used by government and private sector to
    measure changes in prices facing consumers
  • Measures changes in fixed basket of goods, a
    collection of items chosen to represent the
    purchasing pattern of a typical consumer
  • Find out how much basket of goods costs in a base
    year, then how much it costs in other years
  • CPI ( cost in todays prices / cost in base
    year ) 100
  • Each month Bureau of Labor Statistics sends its
    employees out to sample over 90,000 specific
    items around the country to compile the CPI.

28
PERSONAL INCOME
  • The total payments that flow directly into the
    hands of households
  • Personal income national income transfer
    payments - profits retained by firms
  • The amount of personal income that households
    keep after paying taxes is called personal
    disposable income.

29
UNEMPLOYED
Those people who are looking for work but do
not currently have jobs.
30
UNEMPLOYMENT DATA, 1995
U.S. Civilian Population over 16 years of age (
198,584,000 )
Source Economic Report of the President
(Washington, DC U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1996
31
UNEMPLOYMENT DATA, 1995
U.S. Civilian Population over 16 years of age (
198,584,000 )
Labor Force ( 132,304,000 )
Not in labor force ( 66,280,000 )
Source Economic Report of the President
(Washington, DC U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1996
32
UNEMPLOYMENT DATA, 1995
U.S. Civilian Population over 16 years of age (
198,584,000 )
Labor Force ( 132,304,000 )
Not in labor force ( 66,280,000 )
Employed ( 124,900,000 )
Unemployed ( 7,404,000 )
Source Economic Report of the President
(Washington, DC U.S. Government Printing
Office, 1996
33
UNEMPLOYMENT STATISTICS
  • Population represented are all over 16 years of
    age
  • population is divided into two groups
  • those in labor force
  • those not in labor force
  • labor force is divided into two groups
  • employed
  • unemployed

34
UNDEREMPLOYED
  • Workers who hold a part-time job but prefer to
    work full time
  • Workers who hold jobs far below their
    capabilities

35
SELECTED U.S. UNEMPLOYMENT STATISTICS,
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES FOR DECEMBER 1995
Total 5.6 Male, 20 years
over 4.8 Female, 20 years
over 4.7 Both Sexes, 16 -
19 18.0 White 4.9
African American 10.2
White, 16 - 19 15.4 African
American, 16 - 19 35.0 Married
Men 3.2 Married Women
3.8 Women maintaining families
6.8 Source Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Employment and Earnings
36
UNEMPLOYMENT
  • Frictional unemployment occurs naturally in the
    labor market as workers search for jobs
  • Structural unemployment arises from a mismatch of
    skills and jobs
  • Cyclical unemployment rises and falls with
    economic fluctuations it can be either positive
    (in a recession) or negative (in a boom).

37
UNEMPLOYMENT (cont.)
  • Seasonal unemployment changes in seasonal demand
    for workers. Ex. Christmas
  • Technological unemployment arises from new
    technology that need less workers to complete the
    same job. Ex. Automotive Industry

38
FULL EMPLOYMENT
  • Corresponds to zero cyclical unemployment
  • When the economy is at full employment, the only
    unemployment is frictional and structural.

39
RECESSION
  • A period when economic growth is negative (real
    GDP falls) for two consecutive quarters
  • A quarter is three consecutive months during the
    year
  • A recession is a period when real GDP falls for
    at least six months

40
RECESSION
  • Peak
  • The date at which a recession starts
  • Trough
  • The date at which output starts to increase again
  • Since World War II, the United States has
    experienced nine recessions.

41
NINE POSTWAR RECESSIONS
  • Peak Trough Percent Decline in real GDP
  • November 1948 October 1949 1.5
  • July 1953 May 1954 3.2
  • August 1957 April 1958 3.3
  • April 1960 February 1961 1.2
  • December 1969 November 1970 1.0
  • November 1973 March 1975 4.9
  • January 1980 July 1980 2.5
  • July 1981 November 1982 3.0
  • July 1990 March 1991 1.4

42
DEPRESSION
  • A common term for a severe recession
  • In the United States, the Great Depression refers
    to the 1929 - 1933 period, in which real GDP fell
    by over 33
  • It created the most severe economic dislocations
    that the United States has experienced in the
    twentieth century
  • Banks closed, businesses failed, and many people
    lost their life savings
  • Unemployment rose sharply
  • In 1933, over 25 of the people looking for work
    failed to find jobs

43
CAUSES OF RECESSION
  • Changes in technology
  • Disruptions to the financial system
  • Increases in prices of key commodities
  • (Deliberate or inadvertent) government policies

44
CHAIN-TYPE PRICE INDEX FOR GDP
  • An index that measures the average of the prices
    of the goods and services that are contained in
    the GDP
  • Starting in 1996, a chain-type price index for
    GDP replaced the GDP deflator as the principle
    index reported by the U.S. Department of Commerce

45
CHAIN-TYPE PRICE INDEX
  • It has a value of 100 in a given year, called the
    base year
  • The important information in the value of the
    index for any other year is contained in its
    relation to the base year
  • If a chin-type price index for GDP in one year is
    105, it means that prices have increased by 5
    since the base year
  • ( 105 - 100 ) / 100
  • By using a chain price index, we see how the
    overall level of prices changes from one year to
    the next over a long period of time

46
CHAIN PRICE INDEX EXAMPLE
  • YEAR OUTPUT PRICE
  • 1 10 1,000
  • 2 12 1,100
  • If year 1 is chosen as the base year, the price
    index for GDP will be 100
  • The price of the single good in the economy,
    computers, rose by a factor of 1.1
  • ( 1,100 / 1,000 1.1 )
  • The price index for year 2 is equal to the value
    of the index in year 1 (100) times the factor by
    which prices increased (1.1) 100 1.1 110

47
Sources R.J. Gordon, Macroeconomics, New York,
(Harper Collins, 1993) U.S. Department of
Commerce
48
INFLATION
  • The percentage rate of change in price level
    increase
  • If GDP in year 1 is 100 and GDP in year 2 is 110,
    inflation rate is 10

49
Source U.S. Department of Commerce Based on
Chain-type Price Index
50
CLASSICAL ECONOMICS
  • The study of the economy when it operates at or
    near full employment.

51
KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS
  • The study of business cycles and economic
    fluctuations that we develop.
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