1 / 13

Measuring Output- GDP

Measuring Output- GDP. Economic Performance. GDP. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)- dollar amount of all final goods & services produced within a country’s borders in a yr It’s the most important measure of the economy’s economic performance When GDP is down, so is the rest of the economy.

cianna
Download Presentation

Measuring Output- GDP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Measuring Output- GDP Economic Performance

  2. GDP • Gross Domestic Product (GDP)- dollar amount of all final goods & services produced within a country’s borders in a yr • It’s the most important measure of the economy’s economic performance • When GDP is down, so is the rest of the economy

  3. GDP is a measure of all national output • This means that, if a Japanese car is produced in Indiana, it counts towards US GDP • Even if the investor lives outside the US • Think about China & India’s GDP

  4. Measuring GDP= multiply all the final goods & services produced in a 12 month period by their prices • Then add them up to get the total dollar value of production • GDP is calculated every 3 months

  5. Exclusions • Not every item is included in GDP • The Dept of Commerce analyzes production & has to make choices over what to include • This leads to underground economies and black markets

  6. Intermediate products- products used to make other products already counted in GDP • Ex. If you buy replacement tires, those tires are counted in GDP • BUT!!! If you buy a new car, the tires aren’t counted separately • Their value is built into the price of the car

  7. Intermediate products are eliminated from GDP so they aren’t counted twice • This keeps GDP from looking larger than it actually is

  8. Another decision involves the exclusion of secondhand sales- the sales of used goods • When products, already produced, are transferred from one person/group to another, no new production is created • Used cars, houses, clothes, etc…don’t count towards GDP… • Only the original sale… so how do they help the economy?

  9. Nonmarket transactions- transactions that don’t take place in the market- are excluded • They are too difficult to measure • GDP doesn’t count services like you mowing your lawn or picking up sticks • They only count when done for pay outside the home

  10. Many other activities take place in the market, but are excluded because they’re illegal & not reported • Unreported legal & illegal activities: gambling, prostitution, drugs, counterfeiting, smuggling are part of the “underground economy” • GDP could increase nearly 20% if underground economy transactions were included • Why don’t some want it counted?

  11. Limitations • Increases in GDP indicate more people have jobs & earn income • However, GDP tells nothing about the composition of output

  12. So if GDP increases by $10 billion, we know production is growing • But that could be production of military equipment, instead of schools, libraries, etc(North Korea) • GDPdoesn’t show the impact of production on quality of life • 10 million shantyhouses?

  13. Despite the limitations, GDP is still our best measure of economic health • It’s a measure of voluntary transactions in the market • Voluntary transactions are supposed to indicate that both sides feel they are better off • So larger GDP should indicate people being better off

More Related