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Index
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Alphabetic list
of all topics.
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Contents
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An organized
outline of all topics.
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GNP &
GDP
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The two major
measurements of a national
economy.
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MEASURING THE
ECONOMY
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GDP & GNP
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Economists have ways
of gauging a country's economic
status. These numbers always take
the form of how much money is in
the economy, though it is important
to distinguish between the real
numbers and the nominal numbers.
Real numbers are numbers that are
adjusted for inflation. (Inflation
will be discussed later, but for
now, just consider inflation as the
continuing loss of value of
currency) Inflation makes numbers
seem larger than they really are,
so real numbers are nominal numbers
that have had the amount inflation
accounts for removed. A measure of
national out put is the GDP,
the gross domestic product, which
is the combined output within a
country's economy. It includes all
output occuring within a country,
individual income, business income,
everything in one year. GDP is the
most common measure, and when
economists say the economy has
risen or fallen by a certain
amount, they usually mean how the
GDP has changed.
Another number
measuring economic status is
GNP, gross national product.
GNP measures the output of a
country's businesses and people,
even they are overseas. Thus,
citizens of a country that makes
income in another country would be
counted in the GNP. Multinational
corporations would also have their
profits registered in the GNP of
their home country. GDP measures
everything occuring within that
country, even if the money was made
by foreigners and foreign
organizations. GNP minus GDP yields
the net foreign factor income, the
output represented by foreign
activity. This number can be
positive or negative depending on
whether a country invests more
overseas or more overseas countries
invest in it. Sometimes, net
foreign factor income is not
significant because overseas
profits and foreign profits made
domestically may offset each other
pretty well.
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GDP-gross domestic product, the total final
output of people and businesses inside a
country in a year
GNP-gross national product, the total final
output of people and businesses belonging to a
country in a year.
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BREAKDOWN OF THE GDP
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As stated before, GDP
is a measure of the country's total
output. How is this production
measured? It is measured in how
much it is worth. That means
measuring the income made. Income
and output are one and the same,
because output generates income.
So, every item or service that a
country produces is multiplied by
its market price and everything is
added together to arrive at the
GDP. GDP thus, is the total value
of all goods and services produced
in a country. GDP measures only
sales to consumers, not sales from
firms to firms. When companies sell
products that are used as resources
for another company, that income
can not be counted as total output.
Those products are inputs to be
used to make other products. Only
products marketted directly to the
consumer can count as final output.
To eliminate counting in these
intermediate products, companies
can just simply report only the
income they made from consumers.
Or, a product can be traced through
the entire production process
(food, for example, has to go
through farmer to processor to
distributor to retailer, etc.).
Every step of the way, as the
product is built upon, value is
added to it. The value added is
calculated by the price of the
product minus the value of costs
involved (the cost of buying the
part of the product that already
exists).
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CALCULATING THE GDP
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Although the concept
of what GDP consists of may be
difficult, the actual method of
calculating it is not so bad.
Remember that outputs (what GDP
measures) reap in profits when they
are sold. These profits provide
income for everyone in a country.
We can measure GDP either by adding
up all the money spent by all
individuals, the expenditures
approach, or by adding up all the
money made by all individuals, the
income approach. The expenditures
approach adds all personal
spending, all investment
(investment meaning money spent on
the things that produce like
machines and buildings, etc.), and
government spendin, and net exports
(exports minus imports). The income
approach involves adding up all
private income. It adds all the
money that people earn (which does
not count things like government
help, etc.) and profits made by
companies.
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