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National Income Accounting. Lecture 3. Outline. The Components of GDP Measurement of national income Expenditure Approach Value-Added Approach Factor Payments (or Income) Approach. The Components of GDP. Consumption Investment Government Purchases Net Exports Exports Imports.
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National Income Accounting Lecture 3
Outline The Components of GDP Measurement of national income • Expenditure Approach • Value-Added Approach • Factor Payments (or Income) Approach
The Components of GDP Consumption Investment Government Purchases Net Exports • Exports • Imports
Consumption Consumption, C The part of GDP purchased by households as final users • Spending by households on goods and services Largest component of GDP Includes estimations for • Food, fuel, clothes, haircuts, concerts, etc
Consumption Households buy but not part of Consumption: • purchases of new housing • Used goods • why exempted? • Stocks, bonds and land • Why exempted? Part of Consumption but households do not buy: • Total value of food stuffs produced on farms and consumed by farmers and families • Total value of housing services produced by owner-occupied homes
Private Investment Capital is one of four factors of production • Itself produced; used to produce other goods • Oil drilling rigs, cash registers, factories, etc • Capital stock • Sum of all capital goods in the country
Private Investment Investment defined as purchase of goods used to produce other goods • Capital formation Three components: • Business purchases of plant, equipment, and software • New-home construction • Changes inventory stocks • Goods that have been produced but not yet sold
Private Investment • Business purchases of plant, equipment, and software • Why not considered as intermediate goods?
Private Investment • Business purchases of plant, equipment, and software • Why not considered as Intermediate goods? • Intermediate goods used upin production of this year’s goods and services • Firm’s plants, equipment and software lasts for many years • Only a small part used to make up current production • Therefore, new plant, equipment and software regarded as final goods
Private Investment New Home Construction • Most new homes purchased by households • Why not included in Consumption?
Private Investment New Home Construction • Most new homes purchased by households • Why not included in Consumption? • Residential housing an important part of country’s capital stock • Measure of Private Investment should correspond with increase in nation’s capital stock
Private Investment Changes in Inventory • Inventory: Goods that are produced but not yet sold • Goods on store shelves • Goods making their way through the production process in factories • Raw materials waiting to be used • Count changes in firms’ inventories as part of investment in measuring GDP
Private Investment If do not include, could underestimate total production of goods and services in a year Scenario • In a year, automobile industry produced $100bn worth of automobiles • $80bn sold to customers • Remaining unsold $20bn added to inventories • If count consumption alone, we underestimate total production Contribution to GDP is $80bn(consumption) + $20bn(private investment)= $100bn
Private Investment What if Inventory stocks declineduring the year? Scenario • Automobile industry produced $100bn this year, but sold $120bn • Extra $20bn must have come from inventory stocks • Excluded. Why? Total contribution to GDP $120bn(Consumption) + [-20bn(Private Investment)]= $100bn
Private Investment Inventory added to nation’s investment because unsold goods part of a nation’s capital stock • Provide services in the future when finally sold and used An increase in inventories • Increase in nation’s capital stock A decrease in inventories • Decrease in nation’s capital stock
Private Investment • Excludes • Government investment • Police cars, courthouses, fire stations, schools, etc • Consumer durables • Fridges, computers, washing machines, etc • Human capital • Additional skills and training acquired by workforce during the year • E.g. surgeon, electrician, police detective, etc • Ignores depreciation • Capital used up during the year • Other measures of total income
Government Purchases Spending by state and local governments on goods and services Government Investment • Capital goods purchased by government agencies • Roads, hospitals, schools, etc Government Consumption • Spending on goods and services that are used up during the period • Salaries of gov’t workers, computer paper for gov’t offices, fuel for gov’t vehicles, electricity used in gov’t building, etc
Government Purchases Includes goods and services • Goods • Fighter jets, police cars, school buildings • Services • Performed by police, legislators, military, etc
Government Purchases Distinction between government purchases and government outlays Outlays= purchases + transfer payments Does not include transfer payments • Any payment that is not compensation for supplying goods, services or resources • Money redistributed from one group of citizens (taxpayers) to another (the poor, the unemployed, the elderly) • Example: unemployment insurance benefit, welfare payments, money disbursed to homeless shelters, etc • Why not included?
Net Exports Net exports, NX = Exports - Imports • Exports • Spending on domestically produced goods by foreigners • Imports • Spending on foreign goods by domestic residents
Measurement of national income Expenditure Approach Value-Added Approach Factor Payments (or Income) Approach
The Expenditure Approach Add up value of the goods and services purchased by each category of final user GDP= C + I + G + NX
GDP and Its Components: Expenditure Approach This table shows total GDP for the U.S. economy in 2009 and the breakdown of GDP among its four components. When reading this table, recall the identity Y = C + I + G + NX.
Other Approaches to GDP The Value-Added Approach The Factor Payments/ Income Approach
The Value-Added Approach In the Expenditure approach, • Count goods and services only when sold to final users In Value-added approach, • Add up each firm’s contribution to a product as it is produced A firm’s contribution to a product is called its value added
The Value-Added Approach to GDP • Value added • The revenue a firm receives minus the cost of the intermediate goods it buys • Sum of value added by all firms in the economy
Illustrating the Value-Added Approach Ghc2.25 (notebook paper) Ghc1.00 (Wood Chips) Ghc1.50 (raw paper) Ghc3.50 (Notebook paper) Ghc5.00 (Notebook paper) Lumber mill Paper mill Office Supplies Manufacturer Wholesaler Retailer Production of a ream of notebook paper: Ghc(1+ 0.5 + 0.75 + 1.25 + 1.50) = Ghc5
Another Illustration:Value Added Approach Suppose there are 5 stages in getting a suit manufactured and into the hands of a final consumer
The Factor Payments/ Income Approach • Sum of factor payments earned by all households in the economy • factor payments made by firms • Factor payments • Payments to the owners of resources that are used in production
The Income Approach Domestic Income • Total income earned by residents and businesses in an economy There are four (4) components • Employees compensation • Rents • Interests • Profits
The Factor Payments Approach Compensation to employees • Wages and salaries paid to individuals • Fringe benefits • Makes up a largest proportion of national income
The Factor Payments Approach Rents • Income received by households from properties that they own • Income received by firms from properties that they own form part of profits • Rent component of GDP may be small if depreciation is high in a particular year
The Factor Payments Approach Interest • The income that private businesses pay to households that have lent the business money e.g. purchase of stocks • Interests paid to firms also show up in profits
The Factor Payments Approach Profits • The amount that is left over after compensation to employees, rents and interest have been paid out
Other Approaches to GDP Why use more than one method to calculate GDP? • Measurement errors
Problems With GDP • Quality changes • The underground economy • Nonmarket production
Quality Changes Analysts record an increase in GDP only if there is an increase in the quantity of a good or service produced • New pen that lasts four times longer than previous version should cost 4 times as much! • GDP analysts record some quality changes (cars, computers); not all • Reason: Budget constraints GDP underestimates the true growth in output from year to year
The Underground Economy Some production hidden from government • Illegal (drugs, prostitution) • Tax avoidance • Underestimation of true production in economy
Non-Market Production Excluded • Housecleaning • Sewing • Lawn mowing • Child rearing Whenever non-market transactions become market transactions, GDP will rise, even though total production is the same Over last century, much production shifted from home to market • Parenting to day care • Home-cooked food to takeout • Talking to a friend to therapy • Neighbour watching your house to alarm system • Real GDP increases although production has not • Exaggerate growth in GDP over time
In-class questions What components of GDP (if any) would each of the following transactions affect, and in what direction? • A family buys a new refrigerator • Aunt Naana buys a new house • You buy fufu and goat lightsoup • Ghana repaves the Tema Motorway • Your parents buy a bottle of Nigerian gin
‘Take-home’ questions Calculate the total change in a year’s GDP for each country in each of the following scenarios: • General Electric uses $10m worth of steel, glass and plastic to produce its dishwashers. Wages and salaries in the dishwasher division are $40m; the division’s only other expense is $15m in interest that it pays on its bonds. The division’s revenue for the year is $75m. • You win Ghc25,000 in the Ghana lottery. Ever the entrepreneur, you decide to open a washing bay, buying Ghc15,000 worth of equipment from China and Ghc10,000 from Makola market.
Next Class Measures of National Income Real GDP vs. Nominal GDP • Mathematical illustration Limitations of use of GDP as measure of individuals’ welfare