Economics
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Boundless Economics
Measuring Output and Income
Comparing Real and Nominal GDP
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Measuring Output and Income Comparing Real and Nominal GDP
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics Measuring Output and Income
Economics Textbooks Boundless Economics
Economics Textbooks
Economics
Concept Version 9
Created by Boundless

Calculating Real GDP

Real GDP growth is the value of all goods produced in a given year; nominal GDP is value of all the goods taking price changes into account.

Learning Objective

  • Calculate real and nominal GDP growth


Key Points

    • The following equation is used to calculate the GDP: GDP = C + I + G + (X - M) or GDP = private consumption + gross investment + government investment + government spending + (exports - imports).
    • Nominal value changes due to shifts in quantity and price.
    • In economics, real value is not influenced by changes in price, it is only impacted by changes in quantity. Real values measure the purchasing power net of any price changes over time.
    • Real GDP accounts for inflation and deflation. It transforms the money-value measure, nominal GDP, into an index for quantity of total output.

Terms

  • nominal

    Without adjustment to remove the effects of inflation (in contrast to real).

  • gross domestic product

    Known also as GDP, this is a measure of the economic production of a particular territory in financial capital terms over a specific time period.


Example

    • Imagine a country with a GDP of $100 in a given year. In the next year the GDP rises to $105 and the inflation rate is %3. Roughly, we can say that real GDP rises to only $102 as the inflation rate accounted for.

Full Text

Gross Domestic Product

The Gross domestic Product (GDP) is the market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. The GDP is the officially recognized totals. The following equation is used to calculate the GDP:

$GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)$

Written out, the equation for calculating GDP is:

GDP = private consumption + gross investment + government investment + government spending + (exports - imports).

For the gross domestic product, "gross" means that the GDP measures production regardless of the various uses to which the product can be put. Production can be used for immediate consumption, for investment into fixed assets or inventories, or for replacing fixed assets that have depreciated. "Domestic" means that the measurement of GDP contains only products from within its borders.

Nominal GDP

The nominal GDP is the value of all the final goods and services that an economy produced during a given year. It is calculated by using the prices that are current in the year in which the output is produced . In economics, a nominal value is expressed in monetary terms. For example, a nominal value can change due to shifts in quantity and price. The nominal GDP takes into account all of the changes that occurred for all goods and services produced during a given year. If prices change from one period to the next and the output does not change, the nominal GDP would change even though the output remained constant.

Nominal GDP

This image shows the nominal GDP for a given year in the United States.

Real GDP

The real GDP is the total value of all of the final goods and services that an economy produces during a given year, accounting for inflation . It is calculated using the prices of a selected base year. To calculate Real GDP, you must determine how much GDP has been changed by inflation since the base year, and divide out the inflation each year. Real GDP, therefore, accounts for the fact that if prices change but output doesn't, nominal GDP would change.

Real GDP Growth

This graph shows the real GDP growth over a specific period of time.

In economics, real value is not influenced by changes in price, it is only impacted by changes in quantity. Real values measure the purchasing power net of any price changes over time. The real GDP determines the purchasing power net of price changes for a given year. Real GDP accounts for inflation and deflation. It transforms the money-value measure, nominal GDP, into an index for quantity of total output.

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