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The Global Economy Measurement

The Global Economy Measurement. Roadmap. Headline Data Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Inflation How are they measured? What are the basic facts ? FRED. Why worry about measurement?. Need a common vocabulary Small changes in definition make big differences

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The Global Economy Measurement

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  1. The Global EconomyMeasurement

  2. Roadmap • Headline Data • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) • Inflation • How are they measured? • What are the basic facts? • FRED

  3. Why worry about measurement? • Need a common vocabulary • Small changes in definition make big differences • Accurate forecasting requires consistent measurements

  4. GDP • GDP = Gross Domestic Product • GDP = Total market value of the final goods and services newly produced in a nation during a period of time • Market value • Newly produced • Within a nation • Final goods • Gross of depreciation

  5. Three ways to compute GDP • GDP is the sum of: • value-added by production units • payments to labor and capital (owners); almost income (no capital gains) • expenditure on final goods, minus imports

  6. GDP as value added • Value added = sales – material input costs • Material input costs • Goods “used up” in production (cogs) • Doesn’t include capital purchases • Doesn’t include labor

  7. GDP as income • GDP = payments to labor and capital • Payments to capital • Purchases of capital • Rental expenditures • Profits • In income, but not GDP • Capital gains • Net foreign income • In GDP, but not income • Depreciation

  8. GDP as expenditure • Allocate GDP among purchasers of final goods: Y = C + I + G + NX • Y = GDP • C = sales to households • I = sales of capital goods to firms • G = purchases of goods and services by government • NX = X-M net exports (net sales to other countries) • Why only final goods?

  9. GDP identities Farmer Sales = $10 Farm Rent = $3 Net Income (profit) = $7 Value Added =?? Brewer Sales = $110 Factory Rent = $30 Wages = $70 Barley = $10 Value Added =?? Landlord’s income +wages + profits = ?? Value added farming + value added brewing = ?? Expenditure (final) barley + expenditure (final) beer = ??

  10. GDP identities Farmer Sales = $10 Farm Rent = $3 Net Income = $7 Value Added =?? Brewer Sales = $110 Factory Rent = $30 Wages = $70 Barley = $10 Value Added =?? Landlord’s income +wages + profits = ?? (3+30) + (70) + (7) = 110 Value added farming + value added brewing = ?? (10) +(100) =110 Expenditure (final) on barley + expenditure (final) on beer = ?? (0) +(110) =110

  11. GDP identities: extended example GDP by expenditure: GDP by value added: GDP as payments to labor and capital:

  12. GDP by industry manufacturing FIRE bus. services agriculture

  13. GDP by income type labor compensation rentalincome corp. profits interest

  14. GDP by expenditure private consumption government consumption investment net exports

  15. Savings flows I Allocate flows of assets: Y – C – G = I + NX S = I + NX • S = (gross) national saving (purchases of assets) • NX = net purchases of foreign assets

  16. Saving investment saving net exports

  17. Savings flows II • Allocate flows of assets: (Y–C–T) + (T– G) = I + NX Sp + Sg = I + NX • T = taxes net of transfers paid by households to govt • Beware: many measures of saving • Later in the course • We’ll include income and transfers with foreign countries and replace NX with the “current account”

  18. Personal saving saving=personal income-taxes-personal consumption+net transfers

  19. What about prices? Nominal GDP (at current prices): What happens when prices change?

  20. Prices and quantities • GDP measures output at market prices • What if prices change? • If GDP rises, how much is higher quantity, how much higher prices? • Two measures • GDP at current prices • GDP at constant prices (e.g. 2005 prices) • Problem: many ways to do this

  21. Two ways to measure inflation • Approach 1 (“fixed price”) • Compute GDP at current prices (“nominal GDP”) • Compute GDP at constant prices (e.g., 1990) (“real GDP”) • Compute price deflator = ratio of first to second • Inflation is rate of change of deflator • Approach 2 (“fixed basket/quantity”) • Compute GDP at current prices (“nominal GDP”) • Compute price index as cost of a fixed “basket” of products • Compute real quantity as ratio of nominal quantity to index • Inflation is rate of change of index

  22. Example What is the inflation rate? What is real output growth?

  23. Fixed price method (GDP deflator) Base year: 2004

  24. Fixed price method (GDP deflator) Base year: 2004

  25. Fixed price method (GDP deflator) Base year: 2005

  26. Fixed price method (GDP deflator) Base year: 2005

  27. How important was IT in the 1990s? • Features: • Output grew rapidly (60%/year) • Prices fell • Output quality improved • Result: when base year was updated, real growth fell • Why? • Approaches: • Chain weighting • Adjust prices for quality change (easier said than done)

  28. Fixed quantity method (CPI)

  29. Fixed quantity method (CPI)

  30. Your friend FRED • Federal Reserve Economic Database (FRED) • Basic tutorials • Mobile apps • Excel add-ins for Windows and Mac • Basic graph: Enter code in FRED search box • Edit graph to change dates, frequency, appearance, units, etc. • PDF of graph for homework • Download data into Excel spreadsheet

  31. FRED data in Excel • Start at FRED home page • Graph the first data series that you wish to download • Click “Edit Graph” • (1) Adjust the date range, frequency, units • (2) Click “Add data series” • (3) Enter new data code in the search box, repeat step 1 and click “Redraw Graph” • (4) Repeat steps (1) to (3) until the series are all graphed • Click “Download Data in Graph” • Save the Excel file for further analysis of data

  32. Summary • GDP is: output, income, and expenditure • Measuring real GDP is tricky • Fixed weight index • Fixed price index • Neither is perfect

  33. Summary • Composition by industry • Manufacturing shrinking • Services growing • Payments to factors • Labor share near 2/3, rest payments to capital • Shares constant • Expenditure • Private consumption: 60% to 70% of GDP • Private investment: 15% to 20% of GDP

  34. Weekend meditations • How would you adjust social security payments to ensure a constant real payout? • What is the big picture? • What are the issues?

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