Topic 2
Topic 2
Topic 2
Combined with population data, national income accounts can provide a measure
of well-being through per capita income and its growth over time. Also, NIAs,
combined with labor force data, can be used to assess the level and growth rate
of productivity, although the utility of such calculations is limited by NIAs’ omission
of home production, underground activity, and illegal production. Combined with
financial and monetary data, NIAs provide a guide to inflation policy. NIAs provide
the basis for evaluating government policy and can rationalize political challenges
to incumbents by people who are dissatisfied with measurable aspects of the
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government’s policies. In emerging and transition economies, implementing a
dependable and accurate system of NIAs is a crucial step in developing economic
policy. National income measures the monetary value of the flow of output of
goods and services produced in an economy over a period of time. National
accounts, sometimes called macroeconomic accounts and abbreviated as NA,
are statistics focusing on the structure and evolution of economies. They describe
and analyze, in an accessible and reliable way, the economic interactions
(transactions) within an economy. There are an almost unimaginable large number
of these transactions.
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Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the monetary value, in local currency, of all
final economic goods and services produced in a country during a specific period
of time. It is the broadest financial measurement of a nation’s total economic
activity. The total goods and services bought by consumers encompass all private
expenditures, government spending, investments, and net exports. GDP growth
rate is an important indicator of the economic performance of a country. On the
other hand, Gross National Product (GNP) is the total value of all finished goods
and services produced by a country’s citizens in a given financial year, irrespective
of their location. GNP also measures the output generated by a country’s
businesses located domestically or abroad. It can be defined as a piece of
economic statistic that comprises Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and income
earned by the residents from investments made overseas.
Simply put, GNP is a superset of the GDP. While GDP confines its analysis of the
economy to the geographical borders of the country, GNP extends it to also take
account of the net overseas economic activities performed by its residents.
There are two primary methods or formulas by which GDP can be determined:
1. EXPENDITURE
GDP = C + G + I + (X – M)
where:
By using the data in the Table, we can calculate the GDP using the expenditures
approach. As you can see, the table contains more data than is necessary so you
have to look for the parts which make up the expenditures approach to calculating
GDP. The necessary data is highlighted within the table.
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Remember the formula:
GDP = C + G + I + (X – M)
Therefore:
GDP = $602
2. INCOME APPROACH
This GDP formula takes the total income generated by the goods and services
produced.
Total National Income – the sum of all wages, rent, interest, and profits.
Sales Taxes – consumer taxes imposed by the government on the sales of goods
and services.
Net Foreign Factor Income – the difference between the total income that a
country’s citizens and companies generate in foreign countries, versus the total
income foreign citizens and companies generate in that country.
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Example:
Transfer Payments $54
Interest Income (i) $150
Depreciation $36
Wages (W) $67
Gross Private Investment $124
Business Profits (PR) $200
Indirect Business Taxes $74
Rental Income (R) $75
Net Exports $18
Net Foreign Factor Income $12
Government Purchases $156
Household Consumption $304
NI = W + R + i + PR
Therefore:
NI = $492
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GDP = $602
GPD can be measured in several different ways. The most common methods
include:
Nominal GDP – the total value of all goods and services produced at current
market prices. This includes all the changes in market prices during the current
year due to inflation or deflation.
Real GDP – the sum of all goods and services produced at constant prices. The
prices used in determining the Gross Domestic Product are based on a certain
base year or the previous year. This provides a more accurate account of
economic growth, as it is already an inflation-adjusted measurement, meaning the
effects of inflation are taken out.
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dividing Nominal GDP by Real GDP and then multiplying by 100. (Based on the
formula).
Formula:
In 2011: In 2012:
Implication:
The GDP deflator will equal more than 100% whenever nominal GDP is greater than real
GDP. Because the price level is generally increasing while the base year remains
unchanged, nominal GDP is usually greater than real GDP for all years.
On the other hand, GDP is important because it gives information about the size of the
economy and how an economy is performing. The growth rate of real GDP is often used
as an indicator of the general health of the economy. In broad terms, an increase in real
GDP is interpreted as a sign that the economy is doing well.
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