Alright. Let's go through one of the more important calculations in this course, calculating gross domestic product. So we're going to go through the formal definition of gross domestic product here. There are a few different ways to calculate it. A few different ways they talk about it in this class, but this is the formal definition of it. So let's go ahead and go through it. Gross domestic product, it's the value. So we're finding some sort of value of final goods and services produced. Okay? So final goods and services produced when we say final, that means they're going to the end user. So things can go through different stages of production. We're talking about those final goods and services, the ones that actually go to the user of the good. Okay? So they're going to be produced during a certain year, so we'll measure GDP on a yearly basis to see, it as a statistic to measure against other years. So we use this as a statistic that measures growth and we basically use it to measure the well-being of a society, growth in the society whether GDP is bigger this year than last year, and generally, we tend to think in economics. So economists tend to rationalize higher to a higher standard of living here. Okay. So let's go ahead and calculate GDP using what's called the Expenditure Approach. So the expenditure approach, it counts up all of the expenditures during a period. So expenditures, what money is spent during a period. So we break it into 4 categories here, 4 main categories of expenditures, so who is spending money during the period, during the year and that is how we'll calculate. If we total up all the money that is spent on these final goods and services during the year, well, then we'll know what our GDP is. Another way to calculate it is to use the income approach. However, we're going to be focusing here on the expenditures approach. They both end up at the same value because basically, all the money being spent is money that's being earned by someone else, right? So these have to equal each other out: expenditures and income but the most common way we see this is the expenditures approach. Some of your textbooks go into the income approach and we'll have videos related to that, but this is the main way we want to think about it. So, let's go through those 4 components of GDP. The first one here is consumption and when we do our calculation, when we make it into an equation, consumption, we just put it as a c. We label it as a c as the variable for consumption, and this is going to be spending by households on goods and services. So this is general spending. Most of the spending you do is going to be included in this consumption category when calculating GDP. Okay? So those expenditures, that money you spend, you know, going to the store, buying groceries, buying whatever goods and services you buy, in general is going to be included in this consumption category. The purchase of new construction. So the purchase of new construction. So when we're talking about like a new home that just got constructed this year, we're going to exclude it from the consumption category and we're going to include it in this next category investment. So we may have talked about investment a little bit in previous videos, but if this is your first time seeing it, this investment is different than financial investments that you think of. So when we think about this, when we talk about investment in economics and economic investment, this is going to be buying equipment, inventory, and structures. So things like factories, machinery, right, these kind of expenditures are going to be included in investment. Compare that to what you might think of as an investment on a day-to-day basis of financial investment like stocks and bonds, that's not included here, okay? That is not that's not even included in the GDP calculation at all. We'll talk about why that's excluded later, but this investment we're talking about these kind of long-term structural investments here on equipment and structures, things like that. So generally think of it as business spending on long-term growth, right? Like long-term assets if you've taken an accounting class, long-term things like, you know, buildings and land and things like that. So the one thing that we excluded from consumption, the new construction of homes for households, well, we're going to include it here. So new construction is included in investments. So this is like a household investing in the future as well, right? They're investing by buying this new home that's going to last them a long time. So that's included in the investment category. Next, we have government purchases. So government purchases, we just leave that as a g for government purchases and guess what government purchases are? It's spending by the government. Spending on goods and services by local, state, and federal governments. Okay. Pretty self-explanatory there. So what kind of goods do we see in this category? Well, when
11. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Calculating GDP