ECN 204 Lecture Notes - Lecture 10: Purchasing Power Parity, Resource Productivity, Comparative Advantage

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Total income that residents of a country earn within a time period. Measures output by canadians here and abroad, but excludes the contribution to. Gdp: measures the size of an economy, determine whether the economy is relatively big or small. Gdp per capita = gdp / population: gdp per capita is a better indicator of the living standard, determine whether an economy is relatively rich or poor. Rich and poor economies have different price levels. The lower the price level, the greater the purchasing power. Purchasing power will be more in poor countries. Nominal: based on prices when output was produced= gdp valued at current prices. Real gdp: based on prices in some reference year, gdp valued at base period prices. Well being measure shortcomings: gdp and the environment, composition and distribution of output, non material sources of well being. A larger gdp is associated with a higher standard of living in the following ways:

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