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Objectives
Discuss GDP and how economists measure it.
Classify economic events by reference to four macroeconomic categories, and predict the effects the events will have on GDP.
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (GDP):
The market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a year.
Final goods and services have been purchased for final use.
They are not for resale or further manufacture.
Economists often measure GDP by totaling the money spent on four major categories of goods and services
GDP Components
Component Percentage of GDP(plus/minus 1%)
Consumption 70 percent*Investment 12 percentGovernment Spending 22 percentNet Exports (X-M) -4 percent
* 2010 estimates
What is Excluded?
Intermediate goodsUsed goodsStocksIllegal goodsTransfer paymentsNonmarket transactions
Consumption (C)
Spending by households on goods and services. Includes spending on things such as cars, food, and visits to the dentist. Makes up two-thirds of GDP spending.
Investment (I)
Spending by businesses on machinery, factories, equipment, tools, and construction of new buildings.
Government (G)
Spending by all levels of government on goods and services. Includes spending on the military, schools, and highways.
Net Exports (X - M)
Spending by people abroad on U.S. goods and services (exports, or X) minus spending by people in the U.S. on foreign goods and services (imports, or M).
EXAMPLE:
In 2000, in trillions of U.S. dollars, third-quarter GDP estimates were:
GDP = C + I + G + ( X - M )$10.04 = $6.81 + $1.87 + $1.75 + ($1.13 -
1.52)* * Source: Economic Report of the President, 2001, page 274.
What happens?
When C, I, or G increase, GDP increases. When C, I, or G decrease, GDP decreases. When exports (X) go up, GDP goes up
because it means more is produced in the United States.
When imports (M) go up, GDP goes down because it means people in the United States are buying what is produced in other countries.
More
When GDP increases, the economy experiences economic growth and unemployment goes down.
When GDP decreases for two consecutive quarters, the economy is in a recession and unemployment goes up.
In macroeconomics, the term investment is used to mean spending by business on capital goods, such as tools and machinery
6
A foreign government imposes a tariff that discourages its citizens from buying goods from the U.S.
11
Consumers feel good about the future and take out loans to buy more durable goods such as washing machines.
Review
Give an example of each of the following spending categories that make up GDP: Consumption spending, investment spending, government spending, net exports.
How do you compare GDP today from GDP in a previous year?
Nominal GDP – current year pricesTo compare output from year to year you
cannot use nominal GDP Real GDP – adjusted for inflationUse price index for GDP known as GDP
deflator Real GDP for a given year = Nominal GDP for given year X100 GDP deflator for that year
GDP Deflator
year N GDP (billions) R GDP (billions)GDP Deflator (1996 =
100)
1994 7,054.30 7,347.70 96
1995 7,400.50 7,543.80 98.1
1996 7,813.20 7,813 100
1997 8,318.40 8,159.50 101.9
1998 8,781.50 8,508.90 103.2
1996 Real GDP = $7,813.2 billion x1oo = $7,813.2 billion 100
1998 Real GDP = $8,781.5 billion x100 = $8,508.9 billion 103.2
Rate of Economic Growth
Nation realizes economic growth when it increases its full production level of output over time.
Rate of growth = Year 2 Real GDP – Year 1 Real GDP
Year 1 Real GDP
$8,508.9 - $8,159.5 = .0428 4.3% growth from
$ 8,159.5 1997 1998
Years to double = _________70_____ Percentage growth
rate
70/ 4.3 = 16.28
Most economists believe that the average sustainable growth rate is 2.5%