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Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth
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Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Chapter 12

Gross Domestic Product and Growth

Page 2: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

How Can We Measure Economic Growth?

• Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services produced in the country’s borders in a year–Dollar Value is the final selling

price to consumers

Page 3: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Calculating GDP

• Includes cars built in America by a Japanese company

• Does not include cars built in Japan by an American company

Page 4: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Calculating GDP

• Includes cars that are sold to consumers (the final good)

• Does not include rubber, glass, or steel bought by the automaker (intermediate good used to make the final good)– Prevents double counting; the cost

of inputs is already in the price

Page 5: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Two Approaches to Calculating GDP

• The Expenditure Approach

– add together final value of all goods and services

Page 6: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Formula for Expenditure Approach

• C + I + G + NX = GDP

– C is Consumer spending

– I is Business investments

– G is Government spending

– NX is Net Exports

– U.S. current GDP = $13.8 Trillion (#1 in the World)

Page 7: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Two Approaches to Calculating GDP • Income Approach –

add all people’s annual income together– Easier, since IRS

already does this

Page 8: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Nominal vs. Real GDP

• Just because GDP is higher, it does not mean the economy is necessarily better

Page 9: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Nominal GDP

• Nominal means “by name only”

• GDP is usually calculated by using current prices for either expenditure or income approach

• Problem: Inflation would cause GDP to rise, which would indicate economic growth falsely

Page 10: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Real GDP

• Real GDP compares current production to past production using constant prices

Page 11: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Per Capita GDP

• Measures economic output per person (per capita always means per person)

• Shows how changes in GDP are affecting the average person in an economy

Page 12: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Typical High School Boy Questions? This is stupid.

Why do we have to learn

this?

Page 13: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

What GDP does not Measure

• Nonmarket Activities–Bartering–Doing Favors

for people–Producing

your own goods

Page 14: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

What GDP does not Measure

• Underground Economy–Black markets

–Drug dealing

–Gambling

Cookie Monster want $2Gs on

Cookie!

Page 15: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

What GDP does not Measure

• Negative Externalities–Pollution

–Disease

Cookie Monster have Type 2

Diabetes.

Page 16: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

What GDP does not Measure

• Quality of Life–Personal

safety

–Leisure time

Page 17: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Other Economic Statistics to Watch• Rate of Inflation

– Measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI)• Takes a “market basket” of commonly bought

goods, measures changes in price of the market basket from month to month

• Rising CPI = Inflation• Unemployment Rate

– Poll taken by U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics– Measures what % of people are looking for work

and are not currently employed

Page 18: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

GDP, Supply and Demand

• GDP and Price Levels in macroeconomics are graphed similarly to Quantity and Price in microeconomics

Page 19: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

GNP

• GNP measures output of Americans, rather than output within the United States

• GDP + $ from U.S. Business overseas - $ from Foreign Business here = GNP

• Doesn’t help measure success of economy… more a measure of national economic power abroad

Page 20: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

The Business Cycle

• In any capitalist country, the economy will go up and down as time passes

• This process looks like a roller coaster when graphed

Page 21: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

The Business Cycle

Page 22: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Phases of the Business Cycle

• Expansion – real GDP is rising

• Peak – real GDP stops rising, unemployment % is low

• Contraction – falling real GDP, increasing unemployment

• Trough – lowest point, real GDP stops falling

Page 23: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Terms for Describing Contraction and Trough• Recession – contraction

happens for 6 straight months• Depression – no official

definition, just means extremely bad, long contraction

• Stagflation – drop in GDP plus rising inflation

Page 24: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.
Page 25: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.
Page 26: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Factors That Cause the Business Cycle

• Interest rates and credit fluctuations– The Fed helps to restrict these effects by

increasing and decreasing rates to slow and speed the business cycle

Page 27: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Factors That Cause the Business Cycle

• Consumer Expectations – they will spend if they believe times are good, they will save if they believe bad times are coming– Spending means banks have

less capital, economy will expand now but contract later

– High savings provides capital for future economic growth

Page 28: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Factors that Cause the Business Cycle

• Savings Rate - % of disposable (spendable) income saved by Americans–Fun Fact! – Savings Rate

generally drops in America during good economic times

–What effect does that have?

Page 29: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Factors That Cause the Business Cycle

• External Shocks – Negatively affect aggregate supply, thus dropping GDP while raising prices

Page 30: Chapter 12 Gross Domestic Product and Growth How Can We Measure Economic Growth? Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – dollar value of all goods and services.

Economic Indicators

• Things to watch to see if the economy is in contraction or expansion

– rate of new home construction

– stock market activity

– manufacturer’s new orders of capital goods