GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income. Prepared by: CHAPTER19 CHAPTER. Fernando Quijano. 1 of of 33

Similar documents
Chapter 8. GDP : Measuring Total Production and Income

GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income

Macroeconomics Instructor Miller GDP Practice Problems

Chapter 20. The Measurement of National Income. In this chapter you will learn to. National Output and Value Added

Chapter 24. What will you learn in this chapter? Valuing an economy. Measuring the Wealth of Nations

Unit 4: Measuring GDP and Prices

Chapter 11: Activity

Exam 1 Review. 3. A severe recession is called a(n): A) depression. B) deflation. C) exogenous event. D) market-clearing assumption.

Measuring the Aggregate Economy

CHAPTER 5: MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

Macroeconomics: GDP, GDP Deflator, CPI, & Inflation

Chapter 12: Gross Domestic Product and Growth Section 1

MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER

Big Concepts. Measuring U.S. GDP. The Expenditure Approach. Economics 202 Principles Of Macroeconomics

MEASURING A NATION S INCOME

Households Wages, profit, interest, rent = $750. Factor markets. Wages, profit, interest, rent = $750

MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH*

11.1 Estimating Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Objectives

Reference: Gregory Mankiw s Principles of Macroeconomics, 2 nd edition, Chapters 10 and 11. Gross Domestic Product

I. Measuring Output: GDP

Chapter 5: GDP and Economic Growth

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapter. Key Concepts

Practice Problems on NIPA and Key Prices

Lesson 3 - National Income Accounting

Chapter 2 The Measurement and Structure of the National Economy

Macroeconomics. 2.1 Economic Activity

INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS MIDTERM- SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Measuring GDP and Economic Growth

Macroeconomia Capitolo 7. Seguire l andamento della macroeconomia. What you will learn in this chapter:

ANSWERS TO END-OF-CHAPTER QUESTIONS

Tracking the Macroeconomy

A. GDP, Economic Growth, and Business Cycles

Economics 212 Principles of Macroeconomics Study Guide. David L. Kelly

The Data of Macroeconomics

Chapter 15: Spending, Income and GDP

Lecture 3: National Income Accounting Reference - Chapter 5. 3) The Income Approach

Measuring the Macroeconomy

Measuring the Wealth of Nations

Topic 4: Different approaches to GDP

Cosumnes River College Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 3 Due September 17, 2015

The Keynesian Cross. A Fixed Price Level. The Simplest Keynesian-Cross Model: Autonomous Consumption Only

Chapter 12. Aggregate Expenditure and Output in the Short Run

Chapter 13. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis

E D I T I O N CLEP O F F I C I A L S T U D Y G U I D E. The College Board. College Level Examination Program

CONCEPT OF MACROECONOMICS

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 17 MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES AND ISSUES March 17, 2016

NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTING MEASURING THE MACROECONOMY

EC201 Intermediate Macroeconomics. EC201 Intermediate Macroeconomics Problem Set 1 Solution

A HOW-TO GUIDE: FINDING AND INTERPRETING GDP STATISTICS

The level of price and inflation Real GDP: the values of goods and services measured using a constant set of prices

Introduction to Macroeconomics

2. Measuring the Macroeconomy

Name: Date: 3. Variables that a model tries to explain are called: A. endogenous. B. exogenous. C. market clearing. D. fixed.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

April 4th, Flow C was 9 trillion dollars, Flow G was 2 trillion dollars, Flow I was 3 trillion dollars, Flow (X-M) was -0.7 trillion dollars.

HW 2 Macroeconomics 102 Due on 06/12

National Income Accounting

Problem Set for Chapter 10(Multiple choices)

Chapter 4 Measuring GDP and Economic Growth

Lecture 1: Gross Domestic Product

Measuring GDP. A Precise Definition of GDP

GDP: Does It Measure Up? May Classroom Edition. An informative and accessible economic essay with a classroom application.

Chapter 5 Macroeconomic Measurement: The Current Approach Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Econ 202 Final Exam. Douglas, Spring 2006 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

LECTURE NOTES ON MACROECONOMIC PRINCIPLES

Econ 202 Final Exam. Table 3-1 Labor Hours Needed to Make 1 Pound of: Meat Potatoes Farmer 8 2 Rancher 4 5

7 AGGREGATE SUPPLY AND AGGREGATE DEMAND* Chapter. Key Concepts

Finance, Saving, and Investment

THREE KEY FACTS ABOUT ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS

Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

CHAPTER 5. CIRCULAR FLOW MODELS

Preparation course MSc Business & Econonomics- Macroeconomics: Introduction & Concepts

University of Lethbridge Department of Economics ECON 1012 Introduction to Microeconomics Instructor: Michael G. Lanyi. Chapter 20 Measuring GDP

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts

Douglas, Spring 2008 February 21, 2008 PLEDGE: I have neither given nor received unauthorized help on this exam.

Measuring National Output and National Income. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Calculating GDP. Gross National Product (GNP) Expenditure Approach

Answers to Text Questions and Problems. Chapter 22. Answers to Review Questions

Week 4 Tutorial Question Solutions (Ch2 & 3)

CHAPTER 7: AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

EC2105, Professor Laury EXAM 2, FORM A (3/13/02)

FBLA: ECONOMICS. Competency: Basic Economic Concepts and Principles

ECON 3312 Macroeconomics Exam 3 Fall Name MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Potential GDP and Economic Growth

I. Introduction to Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply Model

Government Budget and Fiscal Policy CHAPTER

Pre-Test Chapter 10 ed17

UNIT I NATIONAL INCOME AND MACROECONOMICS

Lesson 7 - The Aggregate Expenditure Model

Chapter 10 Fiscal Policy Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Economics 101 Multiple Choice Questions for Final Examination Miller

GOVERNMENT ECONOMIC OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES. Textbook, Chapter 26 [pg ]

Macroeconomics Instructor Miller Fiscal Policy Practice Problems

Summer 2014 Week 3 Tutorial Questions (Ch2) Solutions

GDP Measuring Output and Income Part II. Alternative Measures Real World Approximations. Reading: RJB for lecture 5

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts

Solutions to Problem Set #2 Spring, a) Units of Price of Nominal GDP Real Year Stuff Produced Stuff GDP Deflator GDP

AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

Econ 202 Section 4 Final Exam

General Certificate of Education Advanced Subsidiary Examination January 2013

Transcription:

1 of 33 2 of 33 CHAPTER19 CHAPTER 19 GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income In the more than 100 years that Ford Motor Company has been in business, its experiences have often mirrored those of the U.S economy. Prepared by: Fernando Quijano 3 of 33

CHAPTER19 CHAPTER 19 Chapter Outline and Learning Objectives GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income 19.1 Measures Total Production 19.2 Does GDP Measure What We Want It to Measure? Discuss whether GDP is a good measure of well-being. 19.3 Real GDP versus Nominal GDP 19.4 Other Measures of Total Production and Total Income Become familiar with other measures of total production and total income. 4 of 33 GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income Microeconomics The study of how households and firms make choices, how they interact in markets, and how the government attempts to influence their choices. Macroeconomics The study of the economy as a whole, including topics such as inflation, unemployment, and economic growth. Business cycle Alternating periods of economic expansion and economic recession. 5 of 33 GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income Expansion The period of a business cycle during which total production and total employment are increasing. Recession The period of a business cycle during which total production and total employment are decreasing. Economic growth The ability of an economy to produce increasing quantities of goods and services. Inflation rate The percentage increase in the price level from one year to the next. 6 of 33

Measuring Total Production: Gross domestic product (GDP) The market value of all final goods and services produced in a country during a period of time, typically one year. GDP Is Measured Using Market Values, Not Quantities The word value is important in the definition of GDP. 7 of 33 Measuring Total Production: GDP Includes Only the Market Value of Final Goods Final good or service A good or service purchased by a final user. Intermediate good or service A good or service that is an input into another good or service, such as a tire on a truck. GDP Includes Only Current Production GDP includes only production that takes place during the indicated time period. 8 of 33 Solved Problem 19-1 Calculating GDP PRODUCTION AND PRICE STATISTICS FOR 2011 (1) PRODUCT (2) QUANTITY (3) PRICE PER UNIT Eye examinations 100 $50.00 Pizzas 80 10.00 Textbooks 20 100.00 Paper 2,000 0.10 PRODUCT (1) QUANTITY (2) PRICE PER UNIT (3) VALUE Eye examinations 100 $50 $5,000 Pizzas 80 10 800 Textbooks 20 100 2,000 YOUR TURN: For more practice, do related problem 1.12 at the end of this chapter. 9 of 33

Production, Income, and the Circular-Flow Diagram FIGURE 19-1 The Circular Flow and the Measurement of GDP The circular-flow diagram illustrates the flow of spending and money in the economy. Firms sell goods and services to three groups: domestic households, foreign firms and households, and the government. To produce goods and services, firms use factors of production: labor, capital, natural resources, and entrepreneurship. Households supply the factors of production to firms in exchange for income in the form of wages, interest, profit, and rent. Firms make payments of wages and interest to households in exchange for hiring workers and other factors of production. The sum of wages, interest, rent, and profit is total income in the economy. We can measure GDP as the total income received by households. 10 of 33 Production, Income, and the Circular-Flow Diagram FIGURE 19-1 (continued) The Circular Flow and the Measurement of GDP The diagram also shows that households use their income to purchase goods and services, pay taxes, and save. Firms and the government borrow the funds that flow from households into the financial system. We can measure GDP either by calculating the total value of expenditures on final goods and services or by calculating the value of total income. 11 of 33 Production, Income, and the Circular-Flow Diagram Transfer payments Payments by the government to individuals for which the government does not receive a new good or service in return. 12 of 33

Components of GDP Personal Consumption Expenditures, or Consumption Consumption Spending by households on goods and services, not including spending on new houses. Gross Private Domestic Investment, or Investment Investment Spending by firms on new factories, office buildings, machinery, and additions to inventories, and spending by households and firms on new houses. Don t Let This Happen to YOU! Remember What Economists Mean by Investment YOUR TURN: Test your understanding by doing related problem 1.8 at the end of this chapter. 13 of 33 Components of GDP Government Consumption and Gross Investment, or Government Purchases Government purchases Spending by federal, state, and local governments on goods and services. 14 of 33 Components of GDP Net Exports of Goods and Services, or Net Exports Net exports Exports minus imports. An Equation for GDP and Some Actual Values Y = C + I + G + NX 15 of 33

An Equation for GDP and Some Actual Values FIGURE 19-2 Components of GDP in 2008 Consumption accounts for 70 percent of GDP, far more than any of the other components. In recent years, net exports typically have been negative, which reduces GDP. 16 of 33 An Equation for GDP and Some Actual Values Consumer spending on services is greater than the sum of spending on durable and nondurable goods. Business fixed investment is the largest component of investment. Purchases made by state and local governments are greater than purchases made by the federal government. Imports are greater than exports, so net exports are negative. 17 of 33 Making Will U.S. Consumers the Connection Be Spending Less? YOUR TURN: Test your understanding by doing related problem 1.11 at the end of this chapter. 18 of 33

Measuring GDP by the Value-Added Method Value added The market value a firm adds to a product. Table 19-1 Calculating Value Added VALUE OF FIRM PRODUCT VALUE ADDED Cotton farmer Value of raw cotton = $1 Value added by cotton farmer = 1 Textile mill Value of raw cotton woven into cotton fabric = $3 Value added by cotton textile mill = ($3 $1) = 2 Shirt company L.L. Bean Value of cotton fabric made into a shirt = $15 Value of shirt for sale on L.L. Bean s Web site = $35 Value added by shirt manufacturer = ($15 $3) = 12 Value added by L.L. Bean = ($35 $15) = 20 Total Value Added = $35 19 of 33 Does GDP Measure What We Want It to Measure? 19.2 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Discuss whether GDP is a good measure of well-being. Shortcomings in GDP as a Measure of Total Production Household Production Household production refers to goods and services people produce for themselves. The Underground Economy Underground economy Buying and selling of goods and services that is concealed from the government to avoid taxes or regulations or because the goods and services are illegal. 20 of 33 Making the Connection Why Do Many Developing Countries Have Such Large Underground Economies? 19.2 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Discuss whether GDP is a good measure of well-being. In some developing countries, more than half the workers may be in the underground economy. A large informal sector can be a sign of government policies that are retarding economic growth. YOUR TURN: Test your understanding by doing related problem 2.6 at the end of this chapter. 21 of 33

Does GDP Measure What We Want It to Measure? 19.2 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Discuss whether GDP is a good measure of well-being. Shortcomings of GDP as a Measure of Well-Being The Value of Leisure Is Not Included in GDP GDP Is Not Adjusted for Pollution or Other Negative Effects of Production GDP Is Not Adjusted for Changes in Crime and Other Social Problems GDP Measures the Size of the Pie but Not How the Pie Is Divided Up 22 of 33 Making the Connection Did World War II Bring Prosperity? 19.2 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Discuss whether GDP is a good measure of well-being. World War II was a period of extraordinary sacrifice and achievement by the greatest generation. But statistics on GDP may give a misleading indication of whether it was also a period of prosperity. YOUR TURN: Test your understanding by doing related problem 2.8 at the end of this chapter. 23 of 33 Real GDP versus Nominal GDP 19.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Calculating Real GDP Nominal GDP The value of final goods and services evaluated at current-year prices. Real GDP The value of final goods and services evaluated at base-year prices. 24 of 33

Solved Problem 19-3 Calculating Real GDP 19.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2005 2011 PRODUCT QUANTITY PRICE QUANTITY PRICE Eye examinations 80 $40 100 $50 Pizzas 90 11 80 10 Textbooks 15 90 20 100 PRODUCT 2011 QUANTITY 2005 PRICE VALUE Eye examinations 100 $40 $4,000 Pizzas 80 11 880 Textbooks 20 90 1,800 YOUR TURN: For more practice, do related problem 3.3 at the end of this chapter. 25 of 33 Real GDP versus Nominal GDP 19.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Comparing Real GDP and Nominal GDP FIGURE 19-3 Nominal GDP and Real GDP, 1990 2008 Currently, the base year for calculating GDP is 2005. In the years before 2005, prices were, on average, lower than in 2005, so nominal GDP was lower than real GDP. In 2005, nominal and real GDP were equal. After 2005, prices have been, on average, higher than in 2005, so nominal GDP is higher than real GDP. 26 of 33 Real GDP versus Nominal GDP 19.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVE The GDP Deflator Price level A measure of the average prices of goods and services in the economy. GDP deflator A measure of the price level, calculated by dividing nominal GDP by real GDP and multiplying by 100. Nominal GDP GDP deflator = 100 Real GDP 27 of 33

Real GDP versus Nominal GDP 19.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVE The GDP Deflator 2007 2008 NOMINAL GDP $14,078 billion $14,441 billion REAL GDP $13,254 billion $13,312 billion FORMULA APPLIED TO 2007 APPLIED TO 2008 GDP Deflator Nominal GDP $14,078 billion = 100 100 = 106 Real GDP $13,254 billion 108 106 100 = 1.9% 106 $14,441 billion 100 = 108 $13,312 billion From these values for the deflator, we can calculate that the price level increased by 1.9 percent between 2007 and 2008: 28 of 33 Other Measures of Total Production and Total Income 19.4 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Become familiar with other measures of total production and total income. Gross National Product (GNP) Gross national product (GNP) is the value of final goods and services produced by residents of the United States, even if the production takes place outside the United States. National Income National income is calculated as GDP minus the consumption of fixed capital, or depreciation. Personal Income Personal income is income received by households. Disposable Personal Income Disposable personal income is equal to personal income minus personal tax payments. 29 of 33 Other Measures of Total Production and Total Income 19.4 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Become familiar with other measures of total production and total income. FIGURE 19-4 Measures of Total Production and Total Income, 2008 The most important measure of total production and total income is gross domestic product (GDP). As we will see in later chapters, for some purposes, the other measures of total production and total income shown in the figure turn out to be more useful than GDP. 30 of 33

Other Measures of Total Production and Total Income 19.4 LEARNING OBJECTIVE Become familiar with other measures of total production and total income. The Division of Income FIGURE 19-5 The Division of Income We can measure GDP in terms of total expenditure or as the total income received by households. The largest component of income received by households is wages, which are more than three times as large as the profits received by sole proprietors and the profits received by corporations combined. 31 of 33 AN INSIDE LOOK >> Falling Auto Purchases Lead to Lower GDP A Slowing Descent: Auto Sales Fell 37Percent, but Improved Slightly Real GDP declined for three consecutive quarters beginning in the third quarter of 2008. 32 of 33 KEY TERMS Business cycle Consumption Economic growth Expansion Final good or service GDP deflator Government purchases Gross domestic product (GDP) Inflation rate Intermediate good or service Investment Macroeconomics Microeconomics Net exports Nominal GDP Price level Real GDP Recession Transfer payments Underground economy Value added 33 of 33