© 2013 Pearson. How do we track our economy’s booms and busts?

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© 2013 Pearson

Transcript of © 2013 Pearson. How do we track our economy’s booms and busts?

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How do we track our economy’s

booms and busts?

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5When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to

1 Define GDP and explain why the value of production, income, and expenditure are the same for an economy.

2 Describe how economic statisticians measure GDP and distinguish between nominal GDP and real GDP.

3 Describe the uses of real GDP and explain its limitations as a measure of the standard of living.

CHAPTER CHECKLIST

GDP: A Measure of TotalProduction and Income

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

GDP Defined

Gross domestic product or GDP

The market value of all the final goods and services produced within a country in a given time period.

Value Produced• Use market prices to value production.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

What Produced

Final good or service is a good or service that is produced for its final user and not as a component of another good or service.

Intermediate good or service is a good or service that is produced by one firm, bought by another firm, and used as a component of a final good or service.

GDP includes only those items that are traded in markets.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Where Produced• Within a country

When Produced• During a given time period.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Circular Flows in the U.S. Economy

Consumption expenditure is the expenditure by households on consumption goods and services.

Investment is the purchase of new capital goods (tools, instruments, machines, buildings, and other constructions) and additions to inventories.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Government expenditure on goods and services is the expenditure by all levels of government on goods and services.

Net exports of goods and services is the value of exports of goods and services minus the value of imports of goods and services.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Exports of goods and services are the items that firms in the United States produce and sell to the rest of the world.

Imports of goods and services are the items that households, firms, and governments in the United States buy from the rest of the world.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Total expenditure is the total amount received by producers of final goods and services.

Consumption expenditure: C

Investment: I

Government expenditure on goods and services: G

Net exports: NX

Total expenditure = C + I + G + NX

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Income

• Labor earns wages.

• Capital earns interest.

• Land earns rent.

• Entrepreneurship earns profits.

Households receive these incomes.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Expenditure Equals Income

Because firms pay out everything they receive as incomes to the factors of production, total expenditure equals total income.

That is:

Y = C + I + G + NX

The value of production equals income equals expenditure.

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5.1 GDP, INCOME, AND EXPENDITURE

Figure 5.1 shows the circular flow of income and expenditure.

The table shows the U.S. data for 2011.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

The Expenditure Approach

Measures GDP by using data on consumption expenditure, investment, government expenditure on goods and services, and net exports.

Table 5.1 on the next slide shows the calculation for 2011.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Expenditures Not in GDP

Used Goods

Expenditure on used goods is not part of GDP because these goods were part of GDP in the period in which they were produced and during which time they were new goods.

Financial Assets

When households buy financial assets such as bonds and stocks, they are making loans, not buying goods and services.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

The Income Approach

Measures GDP by summing the incomes that firms pay households for the factors of production they hire.

The U.S. National Income and Product Account divide incomes into two big categories:

• Wage income• Interest, rent, and profit income

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Wage Income

Wage income, called compensation of employees in the national accounts, is the payment for labor services.

It includes net wages and salaries plus fringe benefits paid by employers such health-care insurance, Social Security contributions, and pension fund contributions.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Interest, Rent, and Profit income

Interest, rent, and profit income, called net operating surplus in the national account, is the sum of the incomes earned by capital, land, and entrepreneurship.

Interest is the income households receive on loans they make minus the interest they pay on their borrowing.

Rent includes payments for the use of land and other rented inputs.

Profit includes the profits of corporations and small businesses.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Net domestic product at factor cost is the sum of wages, interest, rent, and profit.

Net domestic product at factor cost is not GDP.

We need to make two adjustments to arrive at GDP:• One from factor cost to market prices• One from net product to gross product

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

From Factor Cost to Market Price

The expenditure approach values goods at market prices; the income approach values them at factor cost.

Indirect taxes (such as sales taxes) make market prices exceed factor cost.

Subsidies (payments by government to firms) make factor cost exceed market prices.

To convert the value at factor cost to the value at market prices, we must:

• Add indirect taxes and subtract subsidies

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

From Net to Gross

The income approach measures net product.

The expenditure approach measures gross product.

Gross profit is a firm’s profit before subtracting the depreciation of capital.

Net profit is a firm’s profit after subtracting the depreciation of capital.

Depreciation is the decrease in the value of capital that results from its use and from obsolescence.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Income includes net profit, so the income approach gives a net measure.

Expenditure includes investment. Because some new capital is purchased to replace depreciated capital, the expenditure approach gives a gross measure.

To get gross domestic product from the income approach, we must add depreciation to total income.

After making these two adjustments the income approach almost gives the same estimate of GDP as the expenditure approach.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Statistical Discrepancy

The income approach and the expenditure approach do not deliver exactly the same estimate of GDP—there is a statistical discrepancy.

Statistical discrepancy is the discrepancy between the expenditure approach and income approach estimates of GDP, calculated as the GDP expenditure total minus the GDP income total.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

GDP and Related Measures of Production and Income

Gross national product or GNP is the market value of all the final goods and services produced anywhere in the world in a given time period by the factors of production supplied by residents of the country.

U.S. GNP = U.S. GDP + Net factor income from abroad

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Disposable Personal Income

Consumption expenditure is one of the largest components of aggregate expenditure and one of the main influences on it is disposable personal income.

Disposable personal income is the income received by households minus personal income taxes paid.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Figure 5.2 shows the relationship between GDP, GNP, and disposable personal income.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Real GDP and Nominal GDP

Real GDP is the value of the final goods and services produced in a given year expressed in the prices of the base year.

Nominal GDP is the value of the final goods and services produced in a given year expressed in the prices of that same year.

The method of calculating real GDP changed in recent years. Here we describe the essence of the calculation. The appendix gives the technical details.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Calculating Real GDP

The goal of calculating real GDP is to measure the extent to which total production has increased.

Real GDP removes the influence of price changes from the nominal GDP numbers.

To focus on the principles and keep the numbers easy to work with, we’ll calculate real GDP for an economy that produces only one consumption good, one capital good, and one government service.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Table 5.3 shows the calculation with 2005 (base year) and 2011.

To find the total expenditure in 2005 multiply the quantity of each item produced in 2005 by its price in 2005.

Then sum the expenditures to find nominal GDP in 2005.

The next slide shows the data.

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Nominal GDP in 2005 is $100 million.

Because 2005 is the base year, real GDP in 2005 is also $100 million.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

In part (b) of Table 5.3, we calculate nominal GDP in 2011.

Again, we calculate nominal GDP by multiplying the quantity of each item produced by its price and then sum the expenditures to find nominal GDP in 2011.

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Nominal GDP in 2005 is $100 million.

Nominal GDP in 2011 is $300 million.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

Nominal GDP in 2011 is three times its value in 2005.

But by how much has the quantity of final goods and services produced increased?

Nominal GDP in 2005 is $100 million and in 2011 it is $300 million.

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5.2 MEASURING U.S. GDP

The increase in real GDP will tell by how much the quantity of good and services has increased.

Real GDP in 2011 is what the total expenditure would have been in 2011 if prices had remained the same as they were in 2005.

To calculate real GDP in 2011 multiply the quantities produced in 2011 by the price in 2005 and the sum these expenditures to find real GDP in 2011.

Part (c) of Table 5.3 shows the details.

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Real GDP in 2005 is $100 million.

Real GDP in 2011 is $160 million—only 1.6 times real GDP in 2005.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

We use estimates of real GDP for three main purposes:• To compare the standard of living over time• To track the course of the business cycle• To compare the standard of living among countries

The Standard of Living Over Time

To compare living standards we calculate real GDP per person—real GDP divided by the population.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

In 2011, U.S. real GDP was $13,088 billion and the U.S. population was 310.1 million.

Real GDP per person = $13,088 billion ÷ 310.1 million

Real GDP per person = $42,206.

In 1961, real GDP per person was $15,754.

The standard of living in 2011 was 2.7 times the standard of living in 1961.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Two features of our changing standard of living are

1. The growth of potential GDP per person

2. Fluctuations of real GDP per person around potential GDP

Potential GDP is the value of real GDP when all the economy’s factors of production —labor, capital, land, and entrepreneurial ability—are fully employed.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

When some factors of production are unemployed, real GDP is less than potential GDP.

When some factors of production are over-employed and working hard, real GDP exceeds potential GDP.

In the short term, real GDP fluctuates around potential GDP.

To measure the trend in the standard of living, we remove the influence of short-term fluctuations and focus on potential GDP.

Figure 5.3 on next slide shows these two features.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Real GDP per person grows and fluctuates around the path of potential GDP.

Potential GDP per person grew at 2.8 percent in the 1960s and slowed during the 1970s.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Tracking the Course of the Business Cycle

Fluctuations in the pace of expansion of real GDP is called the business cycle.

The business cycle is a periodic, but irregular, up- and down-movement of total production and other measures of economic activity.

The four stages of a business cycle areexpansion, peak, recession, and trough.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

The shaded periods show the recessions—periods of falling production that lasts for at least six months.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Standard of Living Among Countries

To compare living standards across countries, we must convert real GDP into a common currency and common set of prices, called purchasing power parity.

Goods and Services Omitted from GDP

• Household production

• Underground production

• Leisure time

• Environment quality

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Household Production• Real GDP omits household production and it

underestimates the value of the production of many people, most of them women.

Underground Production• Economic activity hidden from government to avoid

taxes and regulations or production that is illegal. • Because underground economic activity is

unreported, it is omitted from GDP.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Leisure Time• Our working time is valued as part of GDP, but our

leisure time is not.

Environment Quality• Pollution is not subtracted from GDP. • We do not count the deteriorating atmosphere as a

negative part of GDP. • If our standard of living is adversely affected by

pollution, our GDP measure does not show this fact.

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5.3 THE USE AND LIMITATIONS OF REAL GDP

Other Influences on the Standard of Living

Health and Life Expectancy

• Good health and a long life do not show up directly in real GDP.

Political Freedom and Social Justice

• A country with a large real GDP per person might have limited political freedom and social justice.

• A country with a lower standard of living might be one in which everyone enjoys political freedom.

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The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Business Cycle Dating Committee determines the dates of U.S. business cycle turning points.

To identify the date of a business cycle peak, the NBER committee looks at data on industrial production, total employment, real GDP, and wholesale and retail sales.

The two most reliable measures of aggregate domestic production are real GDP measured using the expenditure approach and the income approach.

How Do We Track the Booms and Busts of Our Economy?

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The NBER committee met in November 2008 to determine when the economy went into recession.

Because of a statistical discrepancy, the two estimates of real GDP differ and for a few quarters in 2007 and 2008 they told conflicting stories.

The NBER examined other data on real personal income, real manufacturing, wholesale and retail sales, industrial production, and employment.

How Do We Track the Booms and Busts of the Our Economy?

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All of these data peaked between November 2007 and June 2008.

How Do We Track the Booms and Busts of Our Economy?

The committee decided that November 2007 was the peak.

But as the figure shows, real GDP didn’t begin a sustained fall until two quarters later.

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

The Problem with Base-Year Prices

We calculated real GDP in 2011 using 2005 as the base year and found that real GDP in 2011 was 1.6 percent greater than in 2005—an increase of 60%.

But if we had used 2011 prices rather than 2005, real GDP would have increased from $150 million (2011 dollars) in 2005 to $300 million in 2011—an increase of 100%.

So did real GDP increase by 60% or 100%?

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

The BEA method uses the prices of both years.

The three steps in the method are

• Value production in the prices of adjacent years.

• Find the average of the two percentage changes.

• Link (chain) to the base year.

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

Value Production in the Prices of Adjacent Years

Let’s take as the two adjacent years 2012 and its preceding year 2011.

Value the quantities produced in 2011 and 2012 at both the prices of 2011 and the prices of 2012.

Table A5.1 shows the calculations.

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

The table gives

• Value of production in 2011 at 2011 prices is $145.

• Value of production in 2012 at 2011 prices is $160.

• Value of production in 2011 at 2012 prices is $158.

• Value of production in 2012 at 2012 prices is $172.

The next step is the find the percentage increases using 2011 prices and 2012 prices and then average these two percentages.

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

Find the Average of Two Percentage Changes

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

Link (Chain) to the Base Year

Starting in the base year, apply the calculated average percentage increase each year to obtain the chained-dollar real GDP.

Figure A5.1 illustrates the calculation with assumed data. The base year is 2005. Suppose that in 2005, real GDP is $60 million.

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APPENDIX: MEASURING REAL GDP

By applying the average percentage change between each pair of years, we find the chained-dollar real GDP for each year, expressed in terms of 2005 dollars.

We can do this for years after the base year, …

and for years earlier than the base year.