Chapter 12 Economics Gross Domestic Product and Growth
National income accounting
a system economists use to collect and organize macroeconomic statistics on production, income, investment, and savings
intermediate goods
products used in the production of final goods
real GDP per capita
real GDP divided by the total population of a country
aggregate demand
the amount of goods and services in the economy that will be purchased at all possible price levels
gross national product
the annual income earned by a nations firms and citizens
price level
the average of all prices in the economy
Gross domestic product (GDP)
the dollar value of all final goods and services produced within a country borders in a given year
peak
the height of an economic expansion, when real GDP stops rising
depreciation
the loss of the value of capital equipment that results from normal war and tear
trough
the lowest point of an economic contraction, when real GDP stops falling
savings rate
the portion of disposable income that is saved
capital deepening
the process of increasing the amount of capital per worker
aggregate supply
the total amount of goods and services in the economy available at all possible price levels
nondurable goods
those goods that last a short period of time, such as food, light bulbs, and sneakers
durable goods
those goods that last for relatively long time, such as refrigerators cars, and DVD players
real GDP
GDP expressed in constant or unchanging , prices
nominal GDP
GDP measured in current prices
stagflation
a decline in real GDP combined with a rise in the price level
contraction
a period of economic decline marked by falling real GDP
expansion
a period of economic growth as measured by a rise in real GDP
business cycle
a period of macroeconomic expansion followed by one of macroeconomic contraction
recession
a prolonged economic contraction
depression
a recession that is especially long and severe
leading indicators
a set of key economic variables that economists use to predict future trends in a business cycle
economic growth
a steady long-term increase in real GDP
technological progess
an increase in efficiency gained by producing more output without using more inputs
saving
income not used for consumption