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National Income Accounting

National Income Accounting. National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) measure output and income in the U.S. Simon Kuznets led team that established and estimated national income accounts. Developed in 1930s at NBER and U.S. Department of Commerce

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National Income Accounting

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  1. National Income Accounting • National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) measure output and income in the U.S. • Simon Kuznets led team that established and estimated national income accounts. • Developed in 1930s at NBER and U.S. Department of Commerce • During World War II, Kuznets was an associate director at the U.S. War Production Board.

  2. GDP  “Output” • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the market value of finalgoods and services produced within a country during a year. • Market Value: The worth of a thing is the price it will bring. Only Final Goods and Services Count:Counting intermediate goods would result in double counting. • GDP excludes financial transactions and income transfers • these do not reflectproduction. • GDP must be produced withinour borders • Net additions to inventory are current output so they are also included in GDP.

  3. GDP: What’s Produced • GDP includes final output sold plusgoods produced but not sold. • Inventory is a firm’s stock of unsold goods. • Planned inventory changes add or reduce working capital  investment • Unplanned inventory changes are also treated as current period investment or disinvestment

  4. GDP as Valued-Added

  5. Two Ways of Measuring GDP

  6. GDP as Expenditures (1) • Components of GDP (Final expenditures): • personal consumption expenditures (C) • gross private domestic investment (I) • government purchases (G) of goods and services • net exports (X or NX)(exports - imports) • GDP = C + I + G + X

  7. GDP as Expenditures: C + I + G + X

  8. GDP as Expenditures Who Produces it?

  9. GDP Produced by Households? • According to international convention – the System of National Accounts (SNA) Household production included in GDP • Housing services by owner occupiers • Subsistence agriculture • Production of foodstuffs and clothing for own use Household production not included in GDP • Care of family members • Meal preparation • Home improvements • Most household “production”

  10. GDP: Income earned from production • The sum of the income (including profits) received in producing final goods and services equals value of what’s produced. • Payments include: • Wages and benefits paid to workers • Proprietors’ income • Rents • Interest • Corporate profits • Capital consumption allowance • Indirect business taxes • Net factor income from abroad GNP

  11. GDP vs. GNP • Gross Domestic Product (GDP): total value of final goods and services produced within a country … regardless of who produces it • Gross National Product (GNP): total value of final goods and services produced by the citizens (residents) of a country and by the capital stock they ownno matter where it’s produced. • Earnings of Americans working abroad add to our GNP but not to our GDP • Foreign interest and profits earned by U.S. residents and firms add to our GNP but not our GDP

  12. GDP (GNP) as Income

  13. GDP – GNP – NNP – NI – PI – DI

  14. Net National Product (NNP) is GNP net of depreciation. • NNP includes net investment, not gross investment. • National Income (NI) is income that actually goes to factors of production (wages of labor, etc.) • NI excludes indirect business taxes firms collect but don’t keep • NI also excludes depreciation that subtracts from the profits firms truly earn • Personal Income (PI) is national income • Plus net income received but not earned (e.g., interest on gov’t debt, transfer payments like social security) • Minus net income earned but not received (e.g., retained corporate earnings). • Disposable Personal Income (DI) is PI minus personal taxes. • DI is divided between consumption expenditure (C) and saving (S)

  15. Real and Nominal GDP • “Real“ GDPadjusts for inflation. • Nominal GDP ($GDP) measures national output based on current prices of goods and services. • Real GDP measures of the quantity of final goods and services produced • Real GDP measures current output at constantprices • Real GDP eliminates the influence of price changes from nominal GDP.

  16. Did GDP Really Increase?

  17. Consumer Price Index(CPI) • measures the cost over time of a typical bundle of goods and services purchased by households. • Producer Price Index (PPI) • measures average prices received by producers over time for raw materials, intermediate, and final goods. • GDP Price Deflator (GDP Price Index, GDPPI) • measures average prices over time of all goods and services included in GDP. • includes prices of things government buys, capital goods businesses buy, things foreigners buy from us, etc.

  18. Price Indexes • The value of a price index in any year indicates how prices have changed relative to a base year. • The index is 100  the percent change in prices from the base year. • CPI suffers from substitution bias • buyers change the mix of goods they buy in response to price changes. • Chain-type indexes of real GDP correct for this bias.

  19. Composition of CPI: The Shopping Basket

  20. GDPPI (GDP Price Deflator), CPI, and PPI

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