Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
CLASS EXERCISES FOR MEASURING NATIONAL OUTPUT AND INCOME 1. Using the following data, calculate the GDP and NDP. Calculate under closed and open economy. Gross Investment Exports Consumption Government Purchases Consumption of Fixed Capital Imports $46 9 180 84 52 12 2. Using the following data, derive GDP, NDP, National Income, Personal Income, Personal Disposal Income, GNP, and NNP. Which economic indicator is higher, GDP or GNP? Why? Personal Consumption Expenditures Interest Corporate Profit Government Purchases Depreciation Rent Gross Private Domestic Investment Compensation of Employees Factor Incomes from Overseas $490 40 70 150 40 20 50 420 30 Indirect Business Taxes Imports Proprietor’s Income Income Tax Income Earned but not received Income Received but not earned Factor Incomes to Overseas Exports 70 30 55 100 60 70 25 50 3. Calculate the GDP using the value added method. The following tables are given: The Stage of Production (Firm) 1. Oil Drilling 2. Refining 3. Shipping 4. Retail Sale Total Value Sales Value (Rupiah) 50000 70000 - The Cost of Intermediate Goods (Rupiah) 0 - Value Added(Rupiah) 100000 150000 - 4. The table gives a simplified process by which wheat is transformed into a donut. What is the value added by Miller? 1 5. Consider an open economy with expenditure totals given by C I G NX F N T a. b. c. d. e. = $1200 billion = 400 = 300 = -100 = 200 = 100 = 400 (Consumption) (Investment) (Government Spending) (Net Exports) (Government Transfers) (Interest on the Government Debt) (Taxes) What is GNP? What is private saving? What is government saving? What is the rest of the world saving? What is the total saving? Show that it equals investment 6. If investment = $80 million, saving = $50 million, and government expenditure = $90 million, how much are taxes? 7. If consumption expenditures are $500 million, spending on fixed investment is $100 million, imports are $50 million, exports are $55 million, government purchases of goods and services is $200 million, which $20 million of is spent on highways, then GDP is ___ million. 8. Using the following data, calculate the GDP. Consumption = $2000 Transfer Payments = $340 Imports = $220 Wages = $1000 Exports = $180 Investment = $600 Government purchases = $500 9. Given the following information: Consumption of Fixed Capital Indirect Business Taxes Compensation of Employees Rents Interest Proprietor’s Income Corporate Income Taxes Dividends Undistributed Corporate Profits Personal Consumption Expenditures Gross Private Domestic Investment Government Purchases Net Exports Net Foreign Factor Income Earned in the US 438 350 2347 14 287 242 86 83 128 2582 669 815 -78 13 2 Calculate: a. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) b. Net Domestic Product (NDP) c. National Income (Y) 10. GRONINGEN is an open economy with the following information: Consumption Investment Government Expenditure Tax Exports Imports : C = 200 + 0.8 Yd : I = 200 : G = 150 : T = 40 : X = 80 : M = 30 + 0.2Y a. Determine the equilibrium level of national income. b. Determine the savings amount. c. If the full employment national income is 1500, what is the macroeconomic problem that might be faced by GRONINGEN? 11. The following information is given: Personal Consumption Expenditures Interest Corporate Profit Government Purchases Depreciation Rent Gross Private Domestic Investment Compensation of Employees Factor Incomes from Overseas $500 40 85 150 45 25 70 400 30 Indirect Business Taxes Imports Proprietor’s Income Income Tax Income Earned but not received Income Received but not earned Factor Incomes to Overseas Exports 105 30 50 120 80 90 50 80 Using the following information, calculate the GDP (using the expenditure approach), NDP, National Income, Personal Income, Disposable Income, GNP, and NNP. Which economic indicator is higher, GDP or GNP? Why? 12. The following information is provided: Indirect taxes Exports Depreciation Subsidies Gross investment expenditure Income paid abroad Consumption expenditure Government expenditure $ million 7.8 17.0 9.2 4.1 32.2 10.7 75.0 27.3 3 Income from abroad Imports 10.1 14.5 a. Calculate the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Gross National Product (GNP) and Net Domestic Product (NDP) at market price. b. Calculate the GDP and GNP at factor cost. 13. Given the table below, the equilibrium level of GDP is: Income $1500 $1550 $1600 $1650 $1700 Consumption 1350 1395 1440 1485 1530 Investment 140 140 140 140 140 Net Exports 20 20 20 20 20 14. Given the following data, calculate the equilibrium level of income: Y=C+I+G C = 200 + 1/2Yd I = 200 G = 250 T = 200 15. The following is the table for Country A: Year 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 Units of output 8 10 17 18 20 Price per unit $2 3 4 5 8 a. If 1990 is the base year, the GDP deflator for 1993 is … b. In 1994, nominal GDP would be c. If the real GDP in a year was $3668 billion and the price index was 112, then nominal GDP in that year was approximately 16. A typical family in Jakarta, buys only oranges and pens. In the base year, it bought 400 oranges at $1.00 each and 800 pens at $0.75 each. This year, a family buys 500 oranges at $1.50 each and 850 pens at $1.00 each. The CPI this year is_______ 4 17. Use the information in the table to calculate nominal GDP in 1995 and real GDP in 1996. 18. Use information in the table plus the fact that indirect taxes less subsidies are $10 billion and depreciation is $25 billion to calculate the value of GDP. 19. Suppose that nominal GDP per person was $17,000 in 1996, the 1990 GDP deflator was 100, and the 1996 GDP deflator was 90. The approximate real GDP per person in 1996 was ______ 20. The following information is given: Year 1 2 3 Indo (Real GDP) $2000 $2100 $2200 Spain (RGDP) $150000 $152000 $154000 Indo (Population) $200 $202 $210 Spain (Pop.) 500 505 508 a. What is the per capita GDP for Spain in Year 3? 21. Suppose an economy’s real GDP is $30,000 in year 1, and $31,200 in year 2. Assume that population was 100 in year 1 and 102 in year 2. a. What is the growth rate of its real GDP? b. What is the growth rate of GDP per capita? 22. In a three-sector economy, the following conditions prevail Consumption function Tax function Investment function Government expenditure : : : : C = 30 + 0.8Yd T = 0.25Y I = 20 G = 22 Derive the consumption and saving functions after tax. 5 ANSWERS 1. Under Open Economy GDP NDP = C + I + G + NX = $180 + $46 + $84 + ($9 - $12) = $307 = GDP – Consumption of Fixed Capital = $307 - $52 = $255 Under Closed Economy GDP NDP =C+I+G = $180 + $46 + $84 = $310 = GDP – Consumption of Fixed Capital = $310 - $52 = $258 2. Expenditure Approach (Demand Approach) GDP = C + I + G + NX = $490 + 50 + 150 + (50-30) = $710 NDP = GDP – Depreciation = $710 - $40 = $670 National Income = Employees Compensation (Wages and Salaries) + Corporate Profits + Sole Proprietor’s Income + Net Interest Income + Rental Income = $420 + 70 + 55 + 40 + 20 = $605 Personal Income = Salaries & Wages + Interest Income + Rental Income + Dividend Income + Proprietor’s Income + Transfer Payments OR Personal Income = National Income – (Corporate Profits – Dividends) – Social Security or Insurance Taxes + Transfer Payments OR Personal Income = National Income – Income earned but not received + Income received but not earned = $605 - $60 + $70 = $615 6 Personal Disposable Income = Personal Income – Income Tax = $605 - $100 = $515 Income Approach (Supply Approach) GDP = National Income + Depreciation + Indirect Business Taxes + Net Factors Payments (factors incomes/payments to overseas – factor incomes/payments from overseas) = $605 + $40 + $70 + ($25 - $30) = $710 GNP = GDP – Net Factor Payments to the rest of the world = $710 – ($25 - $30) = $715 Since the net factor payments to the rest of the world is negative, therefore GDP<GNP. 3. The computations are as followed: The Stage of Production (Firm) 1. Oil Drilling 2. Refining 3. Shipping 4. Retail Sale Total Value Sales Value (Rupiah) 50000 70000 170000 320000 610000 The Cost of Intermediate Goods (Rupiah) 0 50000 70000 170000 290000 Value Added(Rupiah) 50000 20000 100000 150000 320000 Therefore, the total GDP is Rupiah 320000. 4. The value added by Miller is 40 cents – 25 cents = 15 cents or $0.15. 5. a. b. c. d. e. GNP = C + I + G + NX = 1200 + 400 + 300 -100 = $1800 billion Private saving = Disposable Income (PDI) – Consumption Disposable Income = GNP + Government Transfers + Interest on the Government Debt - Taxes Private Savings = (Y + F + NX – T) – C = (1800 + 200 + 100 – 400) – 1200 = $500 billion. Government saving = Taxes – Government Transfers – Interest on the Government Debt – Government Spending. Sg = T – F – N – Gs = 400 – 200 -100 -300 = -$200 billion Rest of the world saving = -Net exports Using the Sr to denote rest of world saving, Sr = -X = $100 billion Total saving = Private saving + Government saving + Rest of the world saving S = 500 – 200 + 100 = $400 billion, which equals investment. 7 6. I+G+X=S+T+M $80 + $90 = $50 + T T = $120 7. GDP 8. GDP = C + I + G + NX = $2000 + $600 + $500 + ($180 - $220) = $3100 - $40 = $3060 9. a. GDP = C + I + G + NX = 2582 + 669 + 815 + (-78) = $3988 b. NDP = GDP – Depreciation = 3988 – 438 = $3550 c. NI = Compensation of Employees + Corporate Profits (corporate income taxes + dividends + undistributed corporate profits) + Sole Proprietor’s Income + Interest Income + Rental Income = 2347 + 297 (128 + 83 + 86) + 242 + 287 + 14 = $3187 = C + I + G + NX = 500 + 100 + 200 + 5 = $805 10. a. Determine the equilibrium level of national income. Y Y Y 1.2Y 0.4Y Y = C + I + G + NX = (200 + 0.8Yd) + 200 + 150 + (80 – (30 + 0.2Y)) = (200 + 0.8 (Y – 40)) + 350 + 80 – 30 – 0.2Y = 200 + 0.8Y – 32 + 400 = 568 = $1420 Yd = Y – tax b. Determine the savings amount. Y $1420 1420 1420 S S =C+S = (200 + 0.8 (1420 – 40)) + S = 200 + 1104 = 1304 + S = 1420 – 1304 = 116 8 c. If the full employment national income is 1500, what is the macroeconomic problem that might be faced by GRONINGEN? Since the GDP is $1420 and the full employment national income is 1500, thus, from here we can find that the economy is experiencing an underemployment of economic resources which in turn reduces the economic growth. 11. Expenditure Approach (Demand Approach) GDP = C + I + G + NX = $500 + 70 + 150 + (80-30) = $770 (3 marks) NDP = GDP – Depreciation = $770 - $45 = $725 (1.5 marks) National Income = Employees Compensation (Wages and Salaries) + Corporate Profits + Sole Proprietor’s Income + Net Interest Income + Rental Income = $400 + 85 + 50 + 40 + 25 = $600 (3 marks) Personal Income = National Income – Income earned but not received + Income received but not earned = $600 - $80 + $90 = $610 (1.5 marks) Personal Disposable Income = Personal Income – Income Tax = $610 - $120 = $490 (1.5 marks) GNP = GDP – Net Factor Payments to the rest of the world = $770 – ($50 - $30) = $750 (1.5 marks) GDP = NI + IBT + CCA + NFP = $600 + $105 + $45 + 20 = $770 (1.5 marks) Since the net factor payments to the rest of the world is positive, therefore GDP>GNP. (1 mark) 9 12. The answers are as followed: GDP = C + I + G + NX = $137 million GNP = GDP – Net Foreign Income = $136.4 million NDP = GDP – Depreciation = $127.8 million GDP at Factor cost and GNP at factor cost GDP at factor cost = GDP market price + subsidies – indirect taxes = $133.3 million GNP at factor cost = GDP at factor cost – Net foreign income = $132.7 million 13. The equilibrium level of GDP is $1600 14. C = 200 + 1/2Yd C = 200 + ½ (Y – 200) C = 200 + 1/2Y – 100 C = 100 + 1/2Y Yd = Y - tax Y=C+I+G Y = (100 + 1/2Y) + 200 + 250 1/2Y = 550 Y = 550/1/2 Y = 1100 15. a. GDP Deflator = Nominal GDP/Real GDP x 100 = Current Period Price/Base Period Price x 100 = 40 ($5 x 8 units) / 16 ($2 x 8 units) x 100 = $250 b. Nominal GDP in 1994 = $8 x 20 units = $160 c. GDP Deflator (Price Index) = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) x 100 Nominal GDP = (GDP Def. x Real GDP)/100 = 112 x $3668 / 100 = $4108.16 16. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is: Base Year = Oranges ($1 x 400 units) = $400 10 Pens ($0.75 x 800 units) = $600 Total Expenditure = $1000 Current Year = Oranges ($1.50 x 500 units) = $750 Pens ($1.00 x 850 units) = $850 First step, adjust the units (quantity): Current Year: Oranges ($1.50 x 400 units) = $600 Pens ($1.00 x 800 units) = $800 Total Expenditure = $1400 Therefore, CPI = Current Year/ Base Year = $1400/$1000 x 100 = 140 17. Nominal GDP in 1995 Real GDP in 1996 = (Real GDP 1995 x GDP Deflator 1995)/100 = (55 x 120)/100 = $66 billion = Nominal GDP/GDP Deflator x 100 = 80/125 x 100 = $64 billion 18. The value of GDP in 1996 = NI + Depreciation + IBT + Net Factor Payments NI = Compensation of Employees + Net Interest and Rental Income + Corporate Profits + Proprietor’s Income NI = 110 + 15 + 20 + 15 NI = $160 GDP = $160 + $25 + $10 billion GDP = $195 billion 19. 1996 GDP Deflator = Nominal GDP 1996/Real GDP 1996 90 = 17000/Real GDP 1996 Real GDP in 1996 = 17000/90 = $18,889. 20. GDP Per Capita for Spain in Year 3 = GDP/Population = $154,000/508 = 303.149. a. Growth rate of real GDP = $31,200 - $30,000 / $30,000 = 4 percent. 11 b. GDP per capita in year 1 = $30,000/100 = $300 GDP per capita in year 2 = $31,200/102 = $305.88 Growth rate of GDP per capita = $305.88 - $300 / $300 = 1.96% 12