- Gross national product- total value of all final goods and services produced by americans in a year
- GDP Equation = C + Ig+ G + X
- Gross Domestic Product
- C: Consumption
- Ig: Gross Private Domestic Investment
- G: Government spending
- Xn: Exports-imports
- Expenditure approach
- Add up the market value of all domestic expenditures made on final foods and services in a single year
- C+Ig+G+Xn
- Adding up all the incomes earned by households and firms in a single year
- W+R+I+P+Statistical adjustments
- W: Wages
- R: Rents
- I: Interest
- P: Profit
- Government purchases of good + services + govt transfer payments - govt tax and fee collection
- If it is a positive number, it is a deficit
- If it is a negative number, it is a surplus
- Exports- Imports
- GNP
- GDP+ net foreign factor payment
- NNP: net national product
- GNP- depreciation
- GDP - depreciation
- National income
- GDP- Indirect business taxes - depreciation - net foreign factor payment
- Compensation of employees + proprietors income + rental income + interest income + corporate profits
- Disposable personal income
- national income - personal household taxes + gov. transfer payments
- Nominal GDP
- Def: Value of output produced in current prices
- P x Q
- Can increase from year to year if either output or price increase
- Real GDP
- Def: Value of output produced in constant or based year prices
- Adjusted for inflation
- P x Q
- Can increase from year to year only if output increases
- Def: measure inflation by tracking changes in the price of a market basket of goods compared to the base year
- price of market basket of goods in current year / price of market basket of goods in base year
- A price index that is used to adjust nominal GDP to real GDP
- In the base year the GDP deflator is
- = 100 for years after base year
- = >100 For years before the base year
- = <100 (Nomial GDP/ Real GDP) ×100
- (New GDP Deflator - Old GDP Deflator / Old GDP Deflator ) ×100
- Rise in the general level of prices
- Standard inflation rate 2 to 3 percent
- Inflation rate: measures the percentage increase in the price level over time
- Key indicator of an economy's strength
- A decline in the general price level
- It occurs when the inflation rate itself declines
- Measures inflation by tracking the yearly price of a fixed basket of consumer goods and services
- Indicates changes in the price level and cost of living
- Finding inflation rate by using market basket data
- (current year market basket value - base year market basket value / base year market basket value ) x 100
- (current year price index - base year price index / base year price index )x 100
- Used to calculate the number of years it will take for the price level to double at any give rate of inflation
- Years needed to double inflation = 70/ annual inflation rate
- (nominal wages / price level ) ×100
- nominal interest rate - inflation premium
- Nominal interest rate
- Unadjusted cost of borrowing or lending money
- Caused by excess of demand / output that pulls prices upwards
- Caused by a rise in per unit production cost due to increasing resource cost
- Borrowers
- Fixed Contract
- Fixed income
- Savers
- Lenders / creditors
Sorry about the font guys, I'm not tech savvy
ReplyDeleteHey! I like your notes! very easy to read because the background and everything is basic (just like you) AHAHA JK but it makes it easy on the eyes. I think you should post different topics seperately instead of one bundle becasue its a little over whelming. And dd you know that you can find Gross private domestic investment by adding Net investment and Depreciation?!
ReplyDeleteSimplistic definition, and easy to the eyes. The bullet points helped me identify terms much easier, and it's better to understand points of emphasis. This has helped me thoroughly, great presentation!
ReplyDelete