Government and NPISHs Final Consumption
... The Statistical System in the States is similar to that at the Centre. At the apex level is the Directorate of Economics and Statistics (DES), which is responsible for the coordination of statistical activities in the State. Departments of the State Governments, such as, agriculture or health, have ...
... The Statistical System in the States is similar to that at the Centre. At the apex level is the Directorate of Economics and Statistics (DES), which is responsible for the coordination of statistical activities in the State. Departments of the State Governments, such as, agriculture or health, have ...
ASSD-sut egypt 2016
... Final demand categories show the final consumption expenditures by household, government and non-profit institutions serving households, gross fixed capital formation, changes in inventories and goods and services exports. Value added components shows the costs of each industry in term of factor cos ...
... Final demand categories show the final consumption expenditures by household, government and non-profit institutions serving households, gross fixed capital formation, changes in inventories and goods and services exports. Value added components shows the costs of each industry in term of factor cos ...
Chapter 1: The balance of payments: an account of transactions with
... + Compensation of employees receivable from the rest of the world - Compensation of employees payable to the rest of the world + Property income receivable from the rest of the world - Property income payable to the rest of the world + Subsidies receivable from the rest of the world - Current taxes ...
... + Compensation of employees receivable from the rest of the world - Compensation of employees payable to the rest of the world + Property income receivable from the rest of the world - Property income payable to the rest of the world + Subsidies receivable from the rest of the world - Current taxes ...
Topic 2.2 Aggregate demand student version
... the economy. So it refers to the purchase of capital assets e.g. ______________________ etc. which are used to ________ other goods In a free market or mixed economy, most investment is done by _____ (private sector) but state investment is also important. ...
... the economy. So it refers to the purchase of capital assets e.g. ______________________ etc. which are used to ________ other goods In a free market or mixed economy, most investment is done by _____ (private sector) but state investment is also important. ...
Initiates file download
... Between 1970 and 2013, real global value-added in the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (AFF) sector rose from $0.7 trillion to $1.9 trillion, though the sector’s contribution to real GDP fell from 4.3% to 3.3%. These measures, however, ignore the crucial role of the sector in the agro-industry va ...
... Between 1970 and 2013, real global value-added in the Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (AFF) sector rose from $0.7 trillion to $1.9 trillion, though the sector’s contribution to real GDP fell from 4.3% to 3.3%. These measures, however, ignore the crucial role of the sector in the agro-industry va ...
Nominal GDP
... • Use the GDP deflator to take out the effect of inflation and reveal real GDP. • The Base year for current SNA is 2000. • Inflation rate = rate of change of price level, 130% = (230-100)/100*100 ...
... • Use the GDP deflator to take out the effect of inflation and reveal real GDP. • The Base year for current SNA is 2000. • Inflation rate = rate of change of price level, 130% = (230-100)/100*100 ...
Gross Domestic Product, 2016
... The contribution of domestic demand was positive (3.7 percentage points). Among the components of the domestic demand, the largest contribution to the increase in the volume is realised in the households final consumption expenditure (2.2 percentage points) . The contribution of net foreign demand w ...
... The contribution of domestic demand was positive (3.7 percentage points). Among the components of the domestic demand, the largest contribution to the increase in the volume is realised in the households final consumption expenditure (2.2 percentage points) . The contribution of net foreign demand w ...
Executive Summary: Globalisation and the Global Growth of Long
... increased more than seven fold, from US$4.0 trillion in 1993 to US$28.9 trillion in 2013:Q3. This growth was shared across broad regions of the world. Assets in US mutual funds rose nearly 600 percent to US$14.3 trillion. The European mutual fund industry, though smaller, grew faster—by almost 620 p ...
... increased more than seven fold, from US$4.0 trillion in 1993 to US$28.9 trillion in 2013:Q3. This growth was shared across broad regions of the world. Assets in US mutual funds rose nearly 600 percent to US$14.3 trillion. The European mutual fund industry, though smaller, grew faster—by almost 620 p ...
1 July 2016 Household real income in the Q1 up by 1.7%, y-o
... institutions serving households provided for individual consumption. The same value is imputed in the sector of households on the income side (adjusted disposable income) as well as on the expenditure side (real final consumption of households). 7. Average monthly income from employment is defined a ...
... institutions serving households provided for individual consumption. The same value is imputed in the sector of households on the income side (adjusted disposable income) as well as on the expenditure side (real final consumption of households). 7. Average monthly income from employment is defined a ...
File
... DEFINITION – GDP is the market value of all the final goods and services produced in a country over a period of time (usually a year). It includes: •spending by households called Consumption (C ), •spending by firms called Investment (I), •spending by government called Govt. Spending (G) •spending b ...
... DEFINITION – GDP is the market value of all the final goods and services produced in a country over a period of time (usually a year). It includes: •spending by households called Consumption (C ), •spending by firms called Investment (I), •spending by government called Govt. Spending (G) •spending b ...
CP1 - United Nations Statistics Division
... economy and examines the composition of economic activates, and of the interaction between the different economic entities. Afghanistan’s gross domestic product (GDP) is a basic measure of its economic performance. ...
... economy and examines the composition of economic activates, and of the interaction between the different economic entities. Afghanistan’s gross domestic product (GDP) is a basic measure of its economic performance. ...
Gross Domestic Product - Stevens History Welcome!
... We can use GDP to measure standard of living, which relates to material goods. We cannot use it as a complete measure of people’s quality of life. It excludes many factors that affect the quality of life, such as the state of the environment, the level of stress that individuals feel in their daily ...
... We can use GDP to measure standard of living, which relates to material goods. We cannot use it as a complete measure of people’s quality of life. It excludes many factors that affect the quality of life, such as the state of the environment, the level of stress that individuals feel in their daily ...
12 January 2016 Real income of households increased by 2.7
... 6. Individual services and goods provided to households by the general government and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISHs) refer to the value of products and services provided in the form of health and social care, education, housing, and the like. They include especially benefits in ...
... 6. Individual services and goods provided to households by the general government and non-profit institutions serving households (NPISHs) refer to the value of products and services provided in the form of health and social care, education, housing, and the like. They include especially benefits in ...
Prerequisites
... • Investment in inventories, i.e. net change in inventories of final goods awaiting sale or of materials used in production process, is included in GDP (they are currently produced output) ...
... • Investment in inventories, i.e. net change in inventories of final goods awaiting sale or of materials used in production process, is included in GDP (they are currently produced output) ...
Evangel College
... - (The data show that) machinery is a fixed factor and (1) - when the variable factor, labour, is added successively to machinery, (1) the marginal product eventually diminishes (2) - the data illustrate the law of diminishing marginal returns. (1) ...
... - (The data show that) machinery is a fixed factor and (1) - when the variable factor, labour, is added successively to machinery, (1) the marginal product eventually diminishes (2) - the data illustrate the law of diminishing marginal returns. (1) ...
30 September 2016 High profitability of corporations, household real
... 3. Household real income per capita is defined as the adjusted gross disposable income of households, in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by the deflator (price index) of household final consumption expenditure. 4. Household real consumption per capita is defined as rea ...
... 3. Household real income per capita is defined as the adjusted gross disposable income of households, in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by the deflator (price index) of household final consumption expenditure. 4. Household real consumption per capita is defined as rea ...
TRADE AND BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
... – Debt forgiveness – Personal assets that migrants take with them abroad – The transfer of real estate and other fixed assets, such as a military base or an embassy building ...
... – Debt forgiveness – Personal assets that migrants take with them abroad – The transfer of real estate and other fixed assets, such as a military base or an embassy building ...
Achieving Sustainable Development
... By definition, the concept of sustainability means that capital must be preserved for future generations. Economists have defined three levels of sustainability, in terms of the four types of capital defined above: Weak Sustainability preserves total capital, but not necessarily each of the four kin ...
... By definition, the concept of sustainability means that capital must be preserved for future generations. Economists have defined three levels of sustainability, in terms of the four types of capital defined above: Weak Sustainability preserves total capital, but not necessarily each of the four kin ...
Lecture Notes 1
... B. Financial Account: Change in foreign ownership of domestic assets minus change in domestic ownership of foreign assets. It contains the following categories: • Foreign direct investment (FDI) • Portfolio investment refers to the purchase of shares and bonds (it is sometimes grouped together with ...
... B. Financial Account: Change in foreign ownership of domestic assets minus change in domestic ownership of foreign assets. It contains the following categories: • Foreign direct investment (FDI) • Portfolio investment refers to the purchase of shares and bonds (it is sometimes grouped together with ...
30 September 2015 Real income of the population grew faster
... in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by the deflator (price index) of household final consumption expenditure. 4. Household real consumption per capita is defined as real household final expenditure, in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by th ...
... in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by the deflator (price index) of household final consumption expenditure. 4. Household real consumption per capita is defined as real household final expenditure, in nominal terms, divided by the mid-year population and deflated by th ...
Chapter Seven POF - HCC Learning Web
... Identify and describe the factors that affect savings Describe the major capital market securities that facilitate the savings and investment process Discuss the role of individuals in the recent financial crisis ...
... Identify and describe the factors that affect savings Describe the major capital market securities that facilitate the savings and investment process Discuss the role of individuals in the recent financial crisis ...
Gross fixed capital formation
Gross fixed capital formation (GFCF) is a macroeconomic concept used in official national accounts such as the United Nations System of National Accounts (UNSNA), National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) and the European System of Accounts (ESA). The concept dates back to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) studies of Simon Kuznets of capital formation in the 1930s, and standard measures for it were adopted in the 1950s. Statistically it measures the value of acquisitions of new or existing fixed assets by the business sector, governments and ""pure"" households (excluding their unincorporated enterprises) less disposals of fixed assets. GFCF is a component of the expenditure on gross domestic product (GDP), and thus shows something about how much of the new value added in the economy is invested rather than consumed.GFCF is called ""gross"" because the measure does not make any adjustments to deduct the consumption of fixed capital (depreciation of fixed assets) from the investment figures. For the analysis of the development of the productive capital stock, it is important to measure the value of the acquisitions less disposals of fixed assets beyond replacement for obsolescence of existing assets due to normal wear and tear. ""Net fixed investment"" includes the depreciation of existing assets from the figures for new fixed investment, and is called net fixed capital formation.GFCF is not a measure of total investment, because only the value of net additions to fixed assets is measured, and all kinds of financial assets are excluded, as well as stocks of inventories and other operating costs (the latter included in intermediate consumption). If, for example, one examines a company balance sheet, it is easy to see that fixed assets are only one component of the total annual capital outlay.The most important exclusion from GFCF is land sales and purchases. The original reason, leaving aside complex valuation problems involved in estimating the value of land in a standard way, was that if a piece of land is sold, the total amount of land already in existence, is not regarded as being increased thereby; all that happens is that the ownership of the same land changes. Therefore, only the value of land improvement is included in the GFCF measure as a net addition to wealth. In special cases, such as land reclamation from the sea, a river or a lake (e.g. a polder), new land can indeed be created and sold where it did not exist before, adding to fixed assets. The GFCF measure always applies to the resident enterprises of a national territory, and thus if e.g. oil exploration occurs in the open seas, the associated new fixed investment is allocated to the national territory in which the relevant enterprises are resident. Data is usually provided by statistical agencies annually and quarterly, but only within a certain time-lag. Fluctuations in this indicator are often considered to show something about future business activity, business confidence and the pattern of economic growth. In times of economic uncertainty or recession, typically business investment in fixed assets will be reduced, since it ties up additional capital for a longer interval of time, with a risk that it will not pay itself off (and fixed assets may therefore also be scrapped faster). Conversely, in times of robust economic growth, fixed investment will increase across the board, because the observed market expansion makes it likely that such investment will be profitable in the future.