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Measuring the Size of the Economy

Economists typically measure the size of a nation’s overall economy by its gross domestic product (GDP).

The definition of GDP

The definition of GDP

  • Gross domestic product (GDP) is the value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given year.
Measuring GDP

Measuring GDP

  • Measuring GDP involves counting the production of millions of different goods and services—smart phones, cars, music downloads, computers, steel, bananas, college educations, and all other new goods and services that a country produced in the current year—and summing them into a total dollar value.
  • This task is relatively straightforward: take the quantity of everything produced, multiply it by the price at which each product sold, and add up the total.
Approaches to GDP measurement

Approaches to GDP measurement

  • We can measure an economy's GDP in several different ways:
    • By the total dollar value of what the country produces.
    • By the total dollar value of what consumers purchase in the economy ("the expenditures approach").
    • By the total dollar value of national income ("the income approach"). This is because everything that firms produce in an economy, becomes revenue (or income) when sold. This is why the terms "national income" and "GDP" are sometimes used interchangeably.
The value-added approach of measuring GDP

The value-added approach of measuring GDP

  • This is an approach to measuring GDP which involves summing the monetary values at the different stages of the production process. For example:
    • In the production of a loaf of bread selling for $5, the value-added approach recognizes the value of the raw materials sold to the baker to make the bread (e.g. $2). The baker then combines the ingredients with his capital to create the loaf of bread (thereby adding $3 in value).
What is the size of the US economy?

What is the size of the US economy?

  • In 2019, the U.S. GDP totalled $21.4 trillion, the largest economy in the world.
  • China is the second-largest economy in the world, with a 2019 GDP of $14.1 trillion.
Jump to other topics
1

Microeconomics

2

Macroeconomics

2.1

The Level of Overall Economic Activity

2.2

Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply

2.3

Macroeconomic Objectives

2.4

Economic Growth, Poverty & Inequality

2.5

Fiscal Policy

2.6

Monetary Policy

2.7

Supply-Side Policies

3

The Global Economy

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