ECON 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Macroeconomics, The Main Point

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26 Oct 2020
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Gdp and income: why gdp must equal income. At the aggregate level, income and production are conceptually the same thing. When goods are produced, they are eventually sold, and they generate revenue that goes into national income. Example: think about a car that is produced and sold for ,000. This revenue generates various income flows, such as wages, profits, interest, and rent. Some of the revenue goes to buy intermediate goods. But payments for intermediate goods generate revenues for the firms that produce them and these revenues are also transformed into incomes. If you continue to trace the intermediate goods through the various stages of production, you will see that at each stage a greater and greater share of the ,000 in initial revenue is transformed into some kind of income. In the limit, all of the ,000 generated by the production of the car will be transformed into some kind of income.

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