See
also: List of Economic Topics 
MEASURES
OF NATIONAL INCOME AND OUTPUT - macroeconomics
Measures
of national income and output are used in economics to estimate the value of goods
and services produced in an economy. They use a system of national accounts or
national accounting developed by Simon Kuznets in the 1960s. Some of the more
common measures are Gross National Product (GNP), Gross Domestic Product (GDP),
Gross National Income (GNI), Net National Product (NNP), and Net National Income
(NNI).
There
are at least two or three different ways of calculating these numbers. The expenditure
approach determines aggregate demand, or Gross National Expenditure, by summing
consumption, investment, government expenditure and net exports. On the other
hand, the income approach and the closely related output approach can be seen
as the summation of consumption, savings and taxation. The three methods must
yield the same results because the total expenditures on goods and services (GNE)
must by definition be equal to the value of the goods and services produced (GNP)
which must be equal to the total income paid to the factors that produced these
goods and services (GNI). (GNP=GNI=GNE by definition)
In
actual fact, there will be minor differences in the results obtained from the
various methods due to changes in inventory levels. This is because goods in inventory
have been produced (and therefore included in GDP), but not yet sold (and therefore
not yet included in GNE). Similar timing issues can also cause a slight discrepancy
between the value of goods produced (GDP) and the payments to the factors that
produced the goods (particularly if inputs are purchased on credit).
Gross
National Product
Gross
National Product (GNP) is the total value of final goods and services produced
in a year by domestically owned factors of production.
Final
goods are goods that are ultimately consumed rather than used in the production
of another good. For example, a car sold to a consumer is a final good; the components
such as tires sold to the car manufacturer are not; they are intermediate goods
used to make the final good. The same tires, if sold to a consumer, would be a
final good. Only final goods are included when measuring national income. If intermediate
goods were included too, this would lead to double counting; for example, the
value of the tires would be counted once when they are sold to the car manufacturer,
and again when the car is sold to the consumer.
Only
newly produced goods are counted. Transactions in existing goods, such as second-hand
cars, are not included, as these do not involve the production of new goods.
Income
is counted as part of GNP according to who owns the factors of production rather
than where the production takes place. For example, in the case of a German-owned
car factory operating in the US, the profits from the factory would be counted
as part of German GNP rather than US GNP because the capital used in production
(the factory, machinery, etc.) is German owned. The wages of the American workers
would be part of US GNP, while the wages of any German workers on the site would
be part of German GNP.
GNP
Top 10 (2004) (currency exchange rate)
| |
Country |
GNP
($ mill) |
| 1 |
United
States |
10,945,792
|
| 2 |
Japan |
4,389,791
|
| 3 |
Germany |
2,084,631
|
| 4
|
United
Kingdom |
1,680,300
|
| 5 |
France |
1,523,025
|
| 6
|
China |
1,417,301 |
| 7
|
Italy |
1,242,978 |
| 8 |
Canada |
756,770
|
| 9 |
Spain |
698,208
|
| 10 |
Mexico |
637,159
|
Source:
World Bank |
Gross
Domestic Product
Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) is the total value of final goods and services produced
within a country's borders in a year.
GDP
counts income according to where it is earned rather than who owns the factors
of production. In the above example, all of the income from the car factory would
be counted as US GDP rather than German GDP.
To
convert from GNP to GDP you must subtract factor income receipts from foreigners
that correspond to goods and services produced abroad using factor inputs supplied
by domestic sources. To convert from GDP to GNP you must add factor input payments
to foreigners that correspond to goods and services produced in the domestic country
using the factor inputs supplied by foreigners.
GDP
is a better measure of the state of production in the short term. GNP is better
when analysing sources and uses of income.
GDP
Top 10 (2004) (currency exchange rate)
| |
Country |
GNP
($ mill) |
| 1 |
United
States |
10,435,284 |
| 2 |
China |
5,409,852
|
| 3 |
Japan |
4,326,444
|
| 4
|
Germany |
2,400,655
|
| 5 |
United
Kingdom |
1,794,858
|
| 6
|
France |
1,747,973 |
| 7
|
Italy |
1,465,895 |
| 8 |
Canada |
958,390
|
| 9 |
Spain |
836,100
|
| 10 |
Mexico |
626,888
|
Source:
World Bank |
Depreciation and Net National Product
Not
all of GNP is available to produce final goods and services - part of it represents
output that is set aside to maintain the nation's productive capacity. Capital
goods, such as buildings and machinery, lose value over time due to wear and tear
and obsolescence. Depreciation measures the amount of GNP that must be spent on
new capital goods to offset this effect.
In
the Income Approach:
Net
National Product (NNP) is GNP minus depreciation
Net National Income (NNI)
is NNP minus indirect taxes
Personal Income (PI) is NNI minus retained earnings,
corporate taxes, transfer payments, and interest on the public debt
Personal
Disposable Income (PDI) is PI minus personal taxes, plus transfer payments.
no
C = personal consumption
PDI = personal disposable income
TP = personal
taxes paid
TPP = personal transfer payments received from governments
PI
= personal income
RE = retained earnings
TC = corporate taxes
TPC = corporate
transfer payments from governments
IG = interest on the public debt
NNI
= net national income
TIN = indirect taxes
NNP = net national product
D
= depreciation
GNP = gross national product
S
+ C = PDI
S + C + TP - TPP = PI
S + C + TP - TPP + RE + TC - TPC - IG
= NNI
S + C + TP - TPP + RE + TC - TPC - IG + TIN = NNP
S + C + TP - TPP
+ RE + TC - TPC - IG + TIN + D = GNP
Real
and nominal values
Nominal
GNP measures the value of output during a given year using the prices prevailing
during that year. Over time, the general level of prices rise due to inflation,
leading to an increase in nominal GNP even if the volume of goods and services
produced is unchanged.
Real
GNP measures the value of output in two or more different years by valuing the
goods and services adjusted for inflation. For example, if both the "nominal
GNP" and price level doubled between 1995 and 2005, the "real GNP"
would remain the same. For year over year GNP growth, "real GNP" is
usually used as it gives a more accurate view of the economy.
National
income and welfare
GNP
per person is often used as a measure of people's welfare. Countries with higher
GNP often score highly on other measures of welfare, such as life expectancy.
However, there are serious limitations to the usefulness of GNP as a measure of
welfare:
Measures
of GNP typically exclude unpaid economic activity, most importantly domestic work
such as childcare. This can lead to distortions; for example, a paid childminder's
income will contribute to GNP, whereas an unpaid mother's time spent caring for
her children will not, even though they are both carrying out the same economic
activity.
GNP takes no account of the inputs used to produce the output. For
example, if everyone worked for twice the number of hours, then GNP might roughly
double, but this does not necessarily mean that workers are better off as they
would have less leisure time. Similarly, the impact of economic activity on the
environment is not directly taken into account in calculating GNP.
Comparison
of GNP from one country to another may be distorted by movements in exchange rates.
Measuring national income at purchasing power parity can help to overcome this
problem.
GNP does not take into account many factors that may be important
to quality of life, such as the quality of the environment and security from crime.
This can lead to distortions - for example, spending on cleaning oil spill is
included in GDP, but the negative impact of the spill on well-being are not taken
into account.
Because of this, other measures of welfare such as the Index
of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) and Genuine Progress Indicator have been
suggested.
National
accounting formulas (expenditure approach)
C
= Personal consumption expenditures
I = Gross private domestic investment
G
= Government consumption expenditures
X = Net exports of goods and services
M
= Net imports of goods and services
NR = Net income from assets abroad (net
income receipts)
CC = Consumption of fixed capital
IBT = Indirect business
taxes
GDP
= C + I + G + (X - M)
GNP = C + I + G + (X - M) + NR
NI = C + I + G + (X
- M) + NR - CC - IBT
United
States income and output
National
income and output (Billions of dollars)
| Period
Ending |
2003 |
| Gross
national product |
11,059.3
|
| Net
U.S. income receipts from rest of the world |
55.2
|
| U.S.
income receipts |
329.1
|
| U.S.
income payments |
273.9
|
| Gross
domestic product |
11,004.1
|
| Private
consumption of fixed capital |
1,135.9
|
| Government
consumption of fixed capital |
218.1
|
| Statistical
discrepancy |
25.6
|
| National
Income |
9,679.7
|