Macro-C1,2 National Income Stat. Flashcards
1
Q
Define Gross Domestic Product. (GDP)
A
- GDP is the measure of total market value of final goods and services produced by all resident producing units of an economy over a specified time period (currently).
2
Q
What is the difference between final goods & intermediate goods?
A
- Final goods are used for final use/consumption.
- Intermediate goods are used as inputs for production.
3
Q
Define resident producing units.
A
- RPUs of an economy are individuals or organisations that maintain a centre of economic interest in the economy. (i.e. they engages or intent to engage in economic acitivities mainly in the economy over the specified period)
4
Q
Briefly describe the 3 approaches to measure GDP.
A
-
Production Approach (Value-added)
- measures the total value created by production of final goods and services.
- results in “GDP at factor cost”
-
Expenditure Approach
- measures the total expenditure spent on final goods and services.
- results in “GDP at market price”
-
Income Approach
- measures the total factor income arising from the production of final goods and services. (details not covered)
5
Q
Describe and illustrate the production approach to measure GDP.
A
- GDP at factor cost = sum of value-added in all production stages.
- value added = value of output (exluding tax/subsidy) - vlaue of intermediate goods used (inputs)
6
Q
List the components of GDP in expenditure approach.
A
-
GDP = C + I + G + X - M
- C: Private consumption expenditure
- I: Gross investment expenditure
- G: Government consumption expenditure
- X: Exports
- M: Imports
7
Q
What are covered in private consumption expenditure (C)?
A
- It is the total expenditure of all households in an economy on currently-produced final goods and services:
- consumption expenditure of households on final goods and services
- expenditure on final goods and services on non-profit institutions serving households.
Note: expenditure on used/second-hand goods is not included to avoid double counting.
8
Q
What are covered in gross investment expenditure (I)?
A
-
Gross investment expenditure =
- gross domestic fixed capital formation (GDFCF) + change in inventories
-
Gross demostic fixed capital formation =
- net domestic fixed capital formation (NDFCF) + depreciation / capital consumption allowance
- it includes:
- expenditure in real investment on construction
- transfer costs (legal fees, commissions, etc.)
- depreciation/capital consumption allowance
*