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Taking the Nation’s Pulse GDP – Measuring Total Production and Income Chapter 8 • Gross Domestic Product (GDP): The market value of final goods and services produced within a country during a specific time period, usually a year. GDP vs GNP?? • GDP: production within a country’s borders (domestic) • GNP: production by people of a country (national) Only final goods and services count • What Does Not Count Toward GDP? • Sales at intermediate stages of production. Their value is already counted in the final-user good. Including them would result in double counting. Stage of production Sales Receipts Value added to the product (at each stage of production) (equals income created) Stage 1: farmer’s wheat by farmer $.30 $.30 Stage 2: miller’s flour by miller $.65 $.35 Stage 3: baker’s bread (wholesale) by baker $.90 $.25 Stage 4: grocer’s bread (retail) by grocer $1 Total consumer expenditure = $1 $.10 Total value added = $1 • What Else? • Financial transactions and income transfers. They do not reflect production. Stocks • Production outside the geographic borders of the country is not counted. • Goods not produced during the 1955 Chevy current period are not counted. Which are included in this year's GDP? : • • • • • • • • • 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Interest on an AT&T bond YES NO Social Security payments to retirees Services of a painter in painting a house - YES Income of a dentist YES NO Money received from the sale of a 1990 model carMonthly allowance of a college student - NO Rent for a 2 bedroom apartment YES Money received for selling this year's model carYES Interest on a government bond NO Which? • • • • • • • • 10. A two hour decline in the work week - NO 11. Purchase of the AT&T bond NO 12. A $ 2 billion increase in business investmentsYES 13. Purchasing 100 shares of GM common stock NO 14. Purchase of an insurance policy - YES 15. Wages paid to your butler YES 16. Market value of a homemaker's services - NO 17. Purchase of the Mona Lisa NO • GDP is measured in dollars • Each good produced increases output by the amount the purchaser pays for the good. GDP is the sum of total spending on all goods and services produced during the year. Three Two Ways of Measuring GDP Expenditures I ncomes O utput (Value Added) Measuring GDP Dollar flow of expenditures on final goods = GDP = • 1. Expenditure Approach: Dollar flow of income (and indirect cost) of final goods • GDP is the sum of expenditures on final user goods and services purchased by households, investors, governments, and foreigners. • There are four components of GDP: • personal consumption purchases C • gross private investment Ig (including inventories) • government purchases G (consumption and investment) • net exports ( exports minus imports ) Xn Figure 8.2 Components of GDP in 2010 Consumption accounts for 70.5 percent of GDP, far more than any of the other components. In recent years, net exports typically have been negative, which reduces GDP. . © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 10 of 37 Will U.S. Consumers Be Spending Less? Consumption is a larger fraction of GDP in the United States than in most other high-income countries or in rapidly growing countries such as China and India. Over time, consumption in the United States has increased as a fraction of GDP. Although it can be good news for the economy in the long run, the determination of U.S. households to cut back on spending and increase saving in 2011 may partly explain the slow recovery from the 2007– 2009 recession. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 11 of 37 • 2. Resource Cost - Income Approach • GDP is the sum of costs incurred and income (including profits) generated by production of goods and services during the period. a. The direct cost income components of GDP: • employee compensation Labor • self-employment income labor/entrepreneur • rents land • Interest capital • corporate profit entrepreneur Sum of these = national income • 2. Resource Cost - Income Approach: (cont.) Not covered • When derived by Resource Cost Income Approach, GDP is equal to: + national income (employee compensation, self-employment income, rents, interest, corporate profit) + indirect business taxes + depreciation + net income of foreigners • 3. Output – by Industry (Value Added) • Add up output by each industrial sector • Chemicals + Agriculture + … Stage of production Sales Receipts Value added to the product (at each stage of production) (equals income created) Stage 1: farmer’s wheat by farmer $.30 $.30 Stage 2: miller’s flour by miller $.65 $.35 Stage 3: baker’s bread (wholesale) by baker $.90 $.25 Stage 4: grocer’s bread (retail) by grocer $1 Total consumer expenditure = $1 $.10 Total value added = $1 Measuring GDP Using the Value-Added Method Value added The market value a firm adds to a product. Calculating Value Added Firm Value of 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 Value of cotton fabric made into a shirt = $15 Value added by shirt manufacturer = ($15 − $3) = 12 L.L.Bean Value of shirt for sale on L.L.Bean’s Web site = $35 Value added by L.L.Bean = ($35 − $15) = 20 Total Value Added = $35 The price of the shirt on L.L.Bean’s Web site is exactly equal to the sum of the value added by each firm involved in the production of the shirt. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall 16 of 37 • Shortcomings of GDP: • • • • It does not count non-market production. It does not count the underground economy. It makes no adjustment for leisure. It probably understates output increases because of the problem of estimating improvements in the quality of products. • It does not adjust for harmful side effects. • It does not consider standard of living – GDP per person • Great contribution of GDP: • In spite of its shortcomings, real GDP is a reasonably accurate measure of short-term fluctuations in output. • The term "real" means adjusted for inflation. • Price indexes are use to adjust data for inflation. • A price index measures the cost of purchasing a good (or goods) at a point in time relative to the cost of purchasing the identical good during an earlier (or base) period. Creating a price index Year 1 $ Spending 170 Index _____ 2 180 Current year spending 3 Base Base year year spending 200 _____ x 100 _____ 4 200 _____ 5 224 _____ 6 250 _____ 7 280 _____ • measures the impact of price changes on the cost of a typical bundle of goods and services purchased by households. • designed to measure the change in the average price of the market basket of goods included in GDP (a broader price index than the CPI). 1. PPI 2. WPI 3. MPI • The formula for converting the nominal GDP into real GDP is: GDP Deflator1 Real GDP2 = Nominal GDP2 * GDP Deflator2 • Data on both money GDP and price changes are essential for meaningful comparisons of output between two time periods. Converting Earlier Figures to Current Dollars • For comparisons across time periods, we must use current dollars. • Done by “inflating” the earlier data for the increase in the price level. • The formula: Figurecurrent $ = Figureearlier $ * price indexcurrent year price indexearlier year • This will “inflate” the data for earlier years into line with the current purchasing power of the $. Gross Domestic Product Complete the following table assuming that Year 1 is the base year. Year Output Price 1 100 $4.00 2 120 4.40 3 110 5.00 4 110 5.20 5 135 5.20 6 140 5.60 Money GDP GDP Index Real GDP Gross Domestic Product Complete the following table assuming that Year 1 is the base year. Year Output Price Money GDP GDP Index Real GDP 1 100 $4.00 $400 100 $400 2 120 4.40 528 110 480 3 110 5.00 550 125 440 4 110 5.20 572 130 440 5 135 5.20 702 130 540 6 140 5.60 784 140 560 • Gross National Product (GNP): Output by the “nationals” – citizens of the country, regardless of whether that output is produced domestically or abroad. • National income: Income earned by the nationals (citizens) during a period. It is the sum of employee compensation, self-employment income, rents, interest, and corporate profits. Minus depreciation and taxes • Personal income: Income received by domestic households and noncorporate businesses. It is available for consumption, saving, and personal taxes. Includes transfers. • Disposable income: Income available to individuals after personal taxes. Can be spent on consumption or saved. Deriving Real GDP 1996 2001 % increase Nominal GDP Price index Real GDP (billions of U.S. $) (GDP deflator, 1996 = 100) (billions of 1996 $) $7,813 $10,208 30.7% 100.0 109.4 9.4% $7,813 $9,331 19.4% Source: U.S. Department of Commerce. 1998 2003 % increase Nominal GDP Price index Real GDP (billions of U.S. $) (GDP deflator, 2000 = 100) (billions of 1998 $) $8,747 $11,004 25.8% 96.5 106.0 9.8% $8,747 $10,018 14.5% Nominal GDP Price index Real GDP (billions of U.S. $) (GDP deflator, 2000 = 100) (billions of 2000 $) $9,817 $13,247 34.9% 100.0 116.0 16.0% Source: http://www.economagic.com. 2000 2006 % increase Like “Deflating” the $ Source: http://www.economagic.com. $9,817 $11,420 16.3% Interesting Questions 1. The CPI was 177 in 2001 compared to 100 in 1983. Suppose that the price of a ticket at a local movie theater rose from $4 to $8 between 1983 and 2001. Did the real ticket price increase or decrease? Calculate the 1983 ticket price measured in 2001 dollars. 2. The CPI was 210 in 2007 compared to 100 in 1983. Suppose that the price of a ticket at a local movie theater rose from $4 to $8 between 1983 and 2007. Did the real ticket price increase or decrease? Calculate the 1983 ticket price measured in 2007 dollars. GDP Comparisons Across Time Periods and Across Countries 1. Which of the following activities will affect GDP: a. You pay $600 per month to lease an apartment. b. You pay $8,000 to purchase a four-year-old car. c. You have car trouble and have to pay a repair shop $1,500 to fix the transmission of your car. d. You pay $5,100 to purchase 100 shares of Microsoft stock ($50 per share for the stock plus a $100 fee). e. You sell your 100 shares of Microsoft stock (purchased for $5,000) for $6,000 minus a $100 brokerage fee. f. Your aunt sends you $500 to help with your expenses. g. You earn $500 providing computer services for a faculty member. h. You win $500 playing cards with classmates.