ECON 1101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Vintage Car, Environmental Policy

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The total market value of all new final goods and services produced in a given country over a given period of time. We add the monetary value of each item, multiply it by the quantity, and add the market. A picasso painting is not new, a vintage car is not new. But some expenditure on old goods does count (like marketing and sales expenses) Final goods are used by the ultimate customer. Intermediate goods are used up to make final goods. The same good can be either intermediate or final depending on its use. Sewing machine v. cotton used to make a shirt. However, we must count ancillary services (advertising, etc. ) values. We measure it over a year or a quarter. Purchases of capital goods not stocks or bonds (will it break a window?) Replace depreciation (physical capital that wears out or becomes obsolete. Increase or upgrade capital stock (these are net investment)

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