1 / 46

National-Income Accounting

National-Income Accounting . National-Income Accounting. National-income accounting refers to the measurement of aggregate economic activity, particularly national income and its components. Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

jaguar
Télécharger la présentation

National-Income Accounting

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. National-Income Accounting

  2. National-Income Accounting • National-income accounting refers to the measurement of aggregate economic activity, particularly national income and its components.

  3. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) • Gross domestic product (GDP) is the total market value of final goods and services produced within a nation’s borders in a given time period. (Usually a year)

  4. Gross Domestic Product • Total Market Value means the dollar value of every one of the good or service produced during the period of time. • Final goods and service means that production is only counted in the final stage. This is to keep things such as a car’s engine from being counted twice.

  5. GDP Versus GNP • Gross National Product (GNP) refers to output produced by American-owned factors regardless of location. • GDP refers to output produced within America’s borders.

  6. GDP Versus GNP • GDP is geographically focused, including all output produced within a nation’s borders regardless of whose factors of production are used to produce it. • Japanese companies producing in America count, but not American companies abroad.

  7. GDP per Capita • GDP per capita is total GDP divided by total population–average GDP. • GDP per capita is commonly used as a measure of a country’s standard of living. • However, it is not always an accurate measure.

  8. Exceptions from the GDP • There are three major exceptions when creating GDP. • Non-Market Activities • Unreported Incomes • Intermediate Goods

  9. Non-Market Activities • GDP measures exclude most goods and services produced that are not sold in the market. • A homemaker who cleans, washes, gardens, shops and cooks produces goods of value. • Because they are not exchanged in the market they are not included in GDP.

  10. Unreported Income • The GDP statistics fail to capture market activities that are not reported to tax or census authorities. • The underground economy is motivated by tax avoidance or to conceal illegal activities.

  11. Intermediate Goods • Intermediate goods are goods or services purchased for use as input in the production of final goods or services. • For example, the engine or chassis of a car are not counted, so as to keep them from being counted twice.

  12. Value Added • Value added is the increase in the market value of a product that takes place at each stage of the production process.

  13. Value Added in Various Stages of Production

  14. Two Ways to Calculate GDP • Compute the value of the final output. • Count only the value added at each stage of production.

  15. Real Versus Nominal GDP • Nominal GDP is the value of final output produced in a given period, measured in the prices of that period. • Real GDP is the value of final output produced in a given period, adjusted for changing prices.

  16. Computing Real GDP • The base period is the time period used for comparative analysis. • From this base year, we find the GDP deflator for other years. • The GDP deflator is a measure of price changes over time.

  17. Computing Real GDP • The general formula for computing real GDP is:

  18. $10000 9000 8000 7000 GDP (billions of dollars per year) 6000 Nominal GDP 5000 4000 3000 1980 1985 1990 1995 1996 2000 Changes in GDP: Nominal Versus Real

  19. Net Domestic Product • Changes in real GDP tell us how much the economy’s output is growing. • Growth is at the expense of future output unless factors of production are replaced.

  20. Net Domestic Product • Depreciationis the consumption of capital in the production process — the wearing out of plant and equipment.

  21. Net Domestic Product • Net domestic product is the amount of output we could consume without reducing our stock of capital. NDP = GDP – depreciation

  22. Net Domestic Product • Investment is spending on (production of) new plant, equipment, and structures (capital) in a given time period, plus changes in business inventories. • The distinction between GDP and NDP is mirrored in the difference between gross investment and net investment.

  23. Net Domestic Product • Gross investment is total investment expenditure in a given time period. • Net investment is gross investment less depreciation.

  24. Net Domestic Product • The stock of capital — the total collection of plant and equipment — will not grow unless gross investment exceeds depreciation.

  25. The Uses of Output • The GDP accounts also tell us what mix of output has been selected, that is, society’s answer to the core issue of WHAT to produce.

  26. The Uses of Output • The major uses of total output conform to the four sets of market participants: consumers, business firms, government, and foreigners.

  27. Consumption • Goods and services used by households are called consumption goods. • Consumer spending claims nearly two-thirds of our annual output.

  28. Investment • Investment goods are the plant, machinery, and equipment that we produce. • Also includes net inventory changes and new residential construction.

  29. Government Spending • Resources purchased by the government sector are unavailable for consumption or investment purposes.

  30. Net Exports • Exportsare goods and services sold to foreign buyers. • Importsare goods and services purchased from foreign sources.

  31. Net Exports • Exports are added to GDP and imports are subtracted. • Net Exports are the value of exports minus the value of imports.

  32. Computing GDP • The value of GDP can be computed by adding up expenditures of market participants: GDP = C + I + G + (X – IM) Where: C = Consumption expenditure X = exports I= investment expenditure IM = imports G = government expenditure

  33. Measures of Income • GDP accounts have two sides. • One side focuses on expenditure – the demand side. • The other side focuses on income – the supply side.

  34. VALUE OF OUTPUT VALUE OF INCOME Consumer spending Wages Investment spending Profits Factor market Product market Interest Government spending Rent Net exports Sales taxes Depreciation Output = Income

  35. National Income • By charting the flow of income through the economy, we see FOR WHOM the output is produced.

  36. Depreciation • Depreciation charges reduce GDP to the level of NDP (Net Domestic Product) before any income is available to current factors of production. NDP = GDP – depreciation

  37. Net Foreign Factor Income • Wages, interest, and profits paid to foreigners are not part of U.S. income. • They need to be subtracted from the income flow.

  38. Net Foreign Factor Income • Incomes earned by U.S. citizens in other nations represents an inflow of income to U.S. households and are added.

  39. National Income • Once depreciation charges and indirect business taxes are subtracted from GDP and net foreign income is added, we have national income.

  40. National Income • National income (NI) is total income earned by current factors of production. NI = NDP – indirect business taxes + net foreign factor income

  41. Personal Income • Personal income (PI) is the income received by households before payment of personal taxes. Personal income = National income – (corporate taxes + retained earnings + Social Security taxes) + (transfer payments + net interest)

  42. Disposable income • Disposable income (DI) is the after-tax income of households. • It is personal income less personal taxes. Disposable income = personal income – personal taxes

  43. Disposable income • Savingis that part of disposable income not spent on current consumption –disposable income less consumption.

  44. Disposable income • All disposable income is either consumed or saved. Disposable income = Consumption + Saving

  45. The Flow of Income

  46. Total income (GDP) ends up distributed the following way: • To households, in the form of disposable income. • To businesses, in the form of retained earnings and depreciation allowances. • To government, in the form of taxes.

More Related