Chapter 19 "GDP: Measuring Total Production and Income
gross domestic income
GDP calculated as the sum of income payments to households
government purchases
spending by federal, state and local governments on goods and services. State and local spending is greater than fed
investment
spending by firms on new factories, office buildings, machinery, and additions to inventories, plus spending by households on new houses. greatest component is business' fixed investment. Also includes spending on research and development
consumption
spending by households on goods and services, not including spending on new houses, largest component of GDP. largest component of consumption is services over durable and non durable goods
chain-weighted prices
starting with the base year, the BEA takes an average of prices in that year and prices in the following year and uses the average to calculate real GDP
inflation rate
the percentage increase in the price level from one year to the next
expansion
the period of the business cycle during which time total production and total employment are increasing
recession
the period of the business cycle during which total production and total employment are decreasing
real GDP
the value of final goods and services evaluated at base-year prices, change in real GDP represents a change in quantity of goods and services produced problem is that over time prices may change relative to each other
nominal GDP
the value of final goods and services evaluated at current-year prices
Gross national product
the value of final goods and services produced by residents of the united states, even if the production takes place outside the US
depreciation
value of worn out machinery, equipment or other fixed capitol. labeled consumption of fixed capitol in NIPA
disposable personal income
= personal income - tax payments
national income
GDP- depreciation
Microeconomics
The study of how households and firms make choices, how they interact in markets, and how the government attempts to influence their choices
Macroeconomics
The study of the economy as a whole, including topics such as inflation, unemployment and economic growth
income equation
Wages + interest + rent + profit (return to entrepreneurs and business owners for bearing risk)
final goods or services
a good or service purchased by a final user
intermediate good or service
a good or service that is an input into another good or service, such as a tire on a truck
GDP deflator
a measure of the price level, calculated by dividing the nominal GDP by real GDP and multiplying by 100. value of GDP deflator will always be 100 in base years
price level
a measurement of the average prices of goods and services in the economy, want to keep this stable
wages
all compensation received by employees, including fringe benefits like health care
business cycle
alternating periods of economic expansion and economic recession
financial system
banks and stock and bond markets, makes it possible for the government and firms to borrow
underground economy
buying and selling of goods and services that is concealed from the government to avoid taxes or regulations or because it's illegal; an informal sector of the economy
GDP per capita
dividing the value of GDP by the country's population, measurement of well-being
net exports
exports minus imports. imports are greater than exports, negative number.
household production
goods and services people produce for themselves
NIPA
national income and product accounts, a stats table that tracks total production and income
transfer payments
payments by the government to households for which the government does not receive a new good or service. Ex. social security, foreign aid
economic growth
the ability of an economy to produce increasing quantities of goods and services
value added
the market value a firm adds to a product, equal to the difference between the price for which a firm sells a good and the price it paid other firms for intermediate goods
Gross domestic product (GDP)
the market value, in dollar terms of all final goods and services (to avoid double counting) produced in a country during a period of time, typically one year. NOT intermediate goods, used goods, transfer payments, leisure, negative externalities household production or the underground economy *equal to the value of all the income in the economy* equation: consumption + interest + government spending + net exports (exports - imports)