4.9.4 - Uses of National Income Data Flashcards
What is national income?
The flow of new output produced by the economy in a particular period, measured by the flow of factor incomes.
What is national product?
The flow of new output produced by different industries in a particular period.
What is national capital stock?
The stock of capital goods in the economy that has accumulated over time and is measured at a point in time.
What is human capital?
The skills, knowledge and experience possessed by the population.
What is national wealth?
The stock of all goods that exist at a point in time that have value in the economy.
Why does capital consumption occur?
During the process of generating national income, capital is used and (inevitably) breaks or wears down in that process.
What happens if investment doesn’t take place to replace worn-out capital?
The national capital stock shrinks in size, and therefore negative economic growth occurs.
How does positive economic growth generally take place?
Investment over and above the investment to replace worn-out capital stocks.
This then leads to the productivity of the workforce increasing and leading to a shift outwards in the PPF.
How can long-term economic growth be hindered by short-term actions?
If you spend more of the national output on consumption, short-term economic living standards increase at the expense of long-term economic growth.
What is the difference between GDP and GNI?
GDP measures the productivity of industries located within the UK.
GNI measures the standard of living of all those living within the UK. (as it measures all of the income available to spend in the UK, including that from abroad.)
What is the best measure to see how living standards are changing over time?
Real GNP per capita.
Why is real GNP per capita only useful in particular industries?
Particularly in developing countries, the usage of this metric may conceal growing disparities in income distribution.
Why are national income statistics problematic to measure living standards in the UK over time?
- Income distribution
- Non-monetised economy
- The hidden economy
- Quality changes
- Negative externalities
Why is income distribution an issue in measuring living standards over time?
Incomes may not be distributed equally, so using income statistics to measure living standards will not show that only a small fraction of the population are actually benefiting from economic growth.