ECON 2 Lecture 3: GDP and Inflation

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16 Jan 2019
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Just as discussed last lecture, you can calculate gdp using either total spending on domestic goods, total payments, or sum of values added. It is important to note that the value added and profit are two different measurements. Value added is the sales value minus the intermediate goods cost. Profit is sales value minus all costs. Suppose a country only produced apples and computers. To find the gdp, we would simply add up all of the sales that take place in the economy. Nominal gdp is nice for knowing what a country produced in a specific year, but it is not great for comparing different years to each other to figure out how a country"s production has changed. This is because a big change in price would increase the nominal gdp by a large amount if the production quantity remained the same.

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