What is the name of the total value of all a nations goods and services produced each year?

gross domestic product (GDP), total market value of the goods and services produced by a country’s economy during a specified period of time. It includes all final goods and services—that is, those that are produced by the economic agents located in that country regardless of their ownership and that are not resold in any form. It is used throughout the world as the main measure of output and economic activity.

In economics, the final users of goods and services are divided into three main groups: households, businesses, and the government. One way gross domestic product (GDP) is calculated—known as the expenditure approach—is by adding the expenditures made by those three groups of users. Accordingly, GDP is defined by the following formula: GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Spending + Net Exports or more succinctly as GDP = C + I + G + NX where consumption (C) represents private-consumption expenditures by households and nonprofit organizations, investment (I) refers to business expenditures by businesses and home purchases by households, government spending (G) denotes expenditures on goods and services by the government, and net exports (NX) represents a nation’s exports minus its imports.

The expenditure approach is so called because all three variables on the right-hand side of the equation denote expenditures by different groups in the economy. The idea behind the expenditure approach is that the output that is produced in an economy has to be consumed by final users, which are either households, businesses, or the government. Therefore, the sum of all the expenditures by these different groups should equal total output—i.e., GDP.

Each country prepares and publishes its own GDP data regularly. In addition, international organizations such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) periodically publish and maintain historical GDP data for many countries. In the United States, GDP data are published quarterly by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) of the U.S. Department of Commerce. GDP and its components are part of the National Income and Product Accounts data set that the BEA updates on a regular basis.

When an economy experiences several consecutive quarters of positive GDP growth, it is considered to be in an expansion (also called economic boom). Conversely, when it experiences two or more consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, the economy is generally considered to be in a recession (also called economic bust). In the United States, the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research is the authority that announces and keeps track of official expansions and recessions, also known as the business cycle. A separate field within economics called the economics of growth (see economics: Growth and development) specializes in the study of the characteristics and causes of business cycles and long-term growth patterns. Growth economists doing research in that field try to develop models that explain the fluctuations in economic activity, as measured primarily by changes in GDP.

GDP per capita (also called GDP per person) is used as a measure of a country’s standard of living. A country with a higher level of GDP per capita is considered to be better off in economic terms than a country with a lower level.

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GDP differs from gross national product (GNP), which includes all final goods and services produced by resources owned by that country’s residents, whether located in the country or elsewhere. In 1991 the United States substituted GDP for GNP as its main measure of economic output.

Learning Objectives

  • Explain gross domestic product (GDP) and what is counted as a final good or service

Macroeconomics is an empirical subject, meaning that it is verifiable by observation or experience rather than just theory. Given this, the first step toward understanding macroeconomic concepts is to measure the economy.

How large is the U.S. economy? The size of a nation’s overall economy is typically measured by its gross domestic product (GDP), which is the value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given year. The measurement of GDP involves counting up the production of millions of different goods and services—smart phones, cars, music downloads, computers, steel, bananas, college educations, and all other new goods and services produced in the current year—and summing them into a total dollar value. This task is conceptually straightforward: take the quantity of everything produced, multiply it by the price at which each product sold, and add up the total. In 2016, the U.S. GDP totaled $18.6 trillion, the largest GDP in the world.

What is the name of the total value of all a nations goods and services produced each year?

Figure 1. These packaged foods and other products in a grocery store make up just a small sampling of all the goods and services in an economy.

What are Final Goods and Services?—The Problem of Double Counting

GDP is defined as the current value of all final goods and services produced in a nation in a year. What are final goods? They are goods or services at their furthest stage of production at the end of a year. Statisticians who calculate GDP must avoid the mistake of double counting, in which output is counted more than once as it travels through the stages of production. For example, imagine what would happen if government statisticians first counted the value of tires produced by a tire manufacturer, and then counted the value of a new truck sold by an automaker that contains those tires. In this example, the value of the tires would have been counted twice-because the value of the truck already includes the value of the tires.

To avoid this problem, which would overstate the size of the economy considerably, when government statisticians compute the GDP at the end of the year, they count just the value of final goods and services in the chain of production. Intermediate goods, which are goods that are used in the production of other goods, are excluded from GDP calculations.

From the example above, government statisticians would count the value of the truck plus the value of any tires that were produced but not yet put on trucks, since at the end of the year, those tires are counted as final goods. Next year, when the tires are put on new trucks, GDP will include the value of the new trucks less the value of the tires that were counted this year. If this sounds complicated, remember the point is to only count things that get produced once.

The concept of GDP is fairly straightforward: it is just the dollar value of all final goods and services produced in the economy in a year. In our decentralized, market-oriented economy, actually calculating the more than $16 trillion-dollar U.S. GDP—along with how it is changing every few months—is a full-time job for a brigade of government statisticians.

What is counted in GDP?

  • Final goods and services
  • Intermediate goods that have not yet been used in final goods and services.
  • Raw materials that have been produced, but not yet used in the production of intermediate or final goods.

What is not included in GDP?

  • Intermediate goods that have been turned into final goods and services (e.g. tires on a new truck)
  • Used goods
  • Transfer payments
  • Non-market activities
  • Illegal goods

Notice the items that are not counted into GDP, as outlined in the list above. The sales of used goods are not included because they were produced in a previous year and are part of that year’s GDP. Transfer payments are payments by the government to individuals, such as Social Security. Transfers are not included in GDP, because they do not represent production.  Production of non-marketed goods and services—such as home production like when you clean your home—is not counted because these services are not sold in the marketplace.  By contrast, if you hire Merry Maids to clean your home, your payments do count as part of GDP, because the transaction is counted as going through the marketplace.  Finally, the entire underground economy of services paid “under the table” as well as any other illegal sales should be counted, but are not, because they are not reported in any way. In a recent study by Friedrich Schneider of Shadow Economies, the underground economy in the United States was estimated to be 6.6% of GDP, or close to $2 trillion dollars in 2013 alone.

Economists generally estimate GDP using a method called the Expenditure Approach. Let’s explore that next.

Watch this explanation of what GDP is and what is included (and not included) when it is measured. You’ll learn more details about each of these components of GDP soon.

You can view the transcript for “(Macro) Episode 20: GDP” here (opens in new window).

These questions allow you to get as much practice as you need, as you can click the link at the top of the first question (“Try another version of these questions”) to get a new set of questions. Practice until you feel comfortable doing the questions.

final goods and services: goods or services at the furthest stage of their production at the end of a year; that is, they have either been sold to consumers, or they are intermediate goods or raw materials that have not yet been used to produce final goods gross domestic product (GDP): the value of the output of all goods and services produced within a country in a year

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