« Gross Domestic Product (GDP) » : différence entre les versions
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| cours = [[Introduction | | cours = [[Introduction to Macroeconomics]] | ||
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*[[Federica Sbergami|Sbergami, Federica]]<ref>[https://www.unige.ch/gsem/en/research/faculty/all/federica-sbergami/ Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Genève]</ref><ref>[https://www.unine.ch/irene/home/equipe/federica_sbergami.html Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Neuchâtel]</ref><ref>[https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/14836393_Federica_Sbergami Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur Research Gate]</ref> | *[[Federica Sbergami|Sbergami, Federica]]<ref>[https://www.unige.ch/gsem/en/research/faculty/all/federica-sbergami/ Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Genève]</ref><ref>[https://www.unine.ch/irene/home/equipe/federica_sbergami.html Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Neuchâtel]</ref><ref>[https://www.researchgate.net/scientific-contributions/14836393_Federica_Sbergami Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur Research Gate]</ref> | ||
*[[Nicolas Maystre]]<ref>Researchgate.net - [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Nicolas_Maystre Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>Google Scholar - [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=B73U0wsAAAAJ&hl=en Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>VOX, CEPR Policy Portal - [https://voxeu.org/users/nicolasmaystre0 Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>[http://nicolas.maystre.ch/ Nicolas Maystre's webpage]</ref><ref>Cairn. | *[[Nicolas Maystre]]<ref>Researchgate.net - [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Nicolas_Maystre Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>Google Scholar - [https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=B73U0wsAAAAJ&hl=en Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>VOX, CEPR Policy Portal - [https://voxeu.org/users/nicolasmaystre0 Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>[http://nicolas.maystre.ch/ Nicolas Maystre's webpage]</ref><ref>Cairn.info - [https://www.cairn.info/publications-de-Nicolas-Maystre--104530.htm Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>Linkedin - [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nicolas-maystre-82660737/?originalSubdomain=ch Nicolas Maystre]</ref><ref>Academia.edu - [https://unctad.academia.edu/NicolasMaystre Nicolas Maystre]</ref> | ||
| enregistrement = | | enregistrement = | ||
| lectures = | | lectures = | ||
*[[ | *[[Introductory aspects of macroeconomics]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Gross Domestic Product (GDP)]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Consumer Price Index (CPI)]] | ||
*[[Production | *[[Production and economic growth]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Unemployment]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Financial Market]] | ||
*[[ | *[[The monetary system]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Monetary growth and inflation]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Open Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Open Macroeconomics: the Exchange Rate]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Equilibrium in an open economy]] | ||
*[[ | *[[The Keynesian approach and the IS-LM model]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Aggregate demand and supply]] | ||
*[[ | *[[The impact of monetary and fiscal policies]] | ||
*[[Trade-off | *[[Trade-off between inflation and unemployment]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Response to the 2008 Financial Crisis and International Cooperation]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
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{{Translations | {{Translations | ||
| fr = Le Produit Intérieur Brut (PIB) | | fr = Le Produit Intérieur Brut (PIB) | ||
| es = | | es = Producto interno bruto (PIB) | ||
}} | }} | ||
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[[Fichier:Intromacro pbn vs pib 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro pbn vs pib 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
== | == The three lenses == | ||
The three lenses offer three interpretations of GDP as well as three ways of calculating it. | |||
''' | The '''production perspective''': the value of the final annual production of residents in terms of flows = sum of the values added. | ||
''' | '''Income perspective''': the total income of all members of the economy = distribution of the sum of value added among economic agents (wages + return on capital). | ||
''' | '''Expenditure perspective''': the total expenditure devoted to the acquisition of the B&S produced by this economy = use of the product by the various groups of agents. | ||
These three measures are necessarily equivalent (cf. FSO data 1990-2007). | |||
== | == Production perspective == | ||
::: | :::GDP = the sum of value added | ||
The ''added value'' is the increase in the value of the products resulting from the production process. In the national accounts, the added value is obtained by balance : | |||
::: | :::Added Value = value of production - intermediate consumption | ||
Intermediate goods and added value: GDP only includes the value of final goods! | |||
Example - hamburger macdo : | |||
* | *Price of the purchased meat (150 gr.) = 0.50 Frs (hp: no purchase of intermediate goods) | ||
* | *Sale price hamburger = 2.00 Frs | ||
* | *MacDo added value = 1.50 Frs | ||
* | *The GDP is the sum of the added values, here 0.50 + 1.50 = 2.00 Frs (and not 2.50!) = value of the final goods (here only one). | ||
== | == Income perspective == | ||
::: | :::GDP = Σ of compensation of factors of production - production subsidies + indirect taxes + depreciation | ||
As we have seen, if to GDP we add factor income from the rest of the world and subtract factor income paid to the rest of the world, we obtain the National Product (NP). | |||
The '''NATIONAL product''' (e.g. GNP) includes all the production carried out by residents both inside and outside the territory. The criterion is therefore that of residence. | |||
The '"INTERNAL product"' (e.g. GDP) covers all production carried out on the territory by both residents and non-residents. The criterion is therefore that of territory. | |||
According to a number of economists, the national product is a better measure of a country's income, especially at a time of strong economic integration (movement of factors between countries) such as today (cf. video by J. Stiglitz). | |||
== | == Expenditure perspective: the components of GDP == | ||
GDP = Production = Consumption + Investment + Public Expenditure + Trade Balance (= Exports - Imports) | |||
:Y ≡ C + I + G + X - M (<math>X - M</math> = | :Y ≡ C + I + G + X - M (<math>X - M</math> = Trade balance) | ||
Y ≡ domestic demand (C + I + G - M) + external demand (X) | |||
This is an accounting identity! Household production is the same as resident consumption plus non-resident net consumption. | |||
:<math>C</math> | :<math>C</math> includes household expenditure on durable goods (cars, refrigerators ...), perishable goods (food) and services (health, lawyer, hairdresser ...). | ||
:<math>I</math> | :<math>I</math> includes business and household investments (buildings) | ||
:<math>G</math> | :<math>G</math> includes only public expenditure on goods and services (social transfers (unemployment, AHV, etc.) and interest on public debt are not included as they are not a counterpart of a good or service produced in the year). | ||
== | == The components of GDP: examples == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro composantes du PIB exemples 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro composantes du PIB exemples 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
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[[Fichier:Intromacro composantes du PIB exemples 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro composantes du PIB exemples 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
== | == Production perspective: an example == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro Optique production 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro Optique production 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
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[[Fichier:Intromacro Optique revenu 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro Optique revenu 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
== | == Expenditure perspective: an example == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro Optique dépense 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro Optique dépense 2.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
NB: | NB: these three alternative ways of calculating GDP give exactly the same result. | ||
== PIB réel versus nominal == | == PIB réel versus nominal == | ||
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[[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel versus nominal 1.png|400px|vignette|center]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel versus nominal 1.png|400px|vignette|center]] | ||
== | == Real and nominal GDP: calculations == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel et nominal calculs 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel et nominal calculs 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
The real increase in GDP is much less dramatic than the nominal increase, as there is a significant increase in prices during the period. | |||
== Nominal vs. | == Nominal vs. actual: more in general == | ||
In a simplified economy producing only two goods, hot dogs (good 1) and hamburgers (good 2), nominal GDP (or GDP at current prices) in <math>t</math> is written : | |||
:<math>PIB_t = p_1^t \times q_1^t + p_2^t \times q_2^t</math> | :<math>PIB_t = p_1^t \times q_1^t + p_2^t \times q_2^t</math> | ||
Sf the prices of hot dogs and hamburgers are respectively p10 and p20 in the initial (base) period, real GDP (or GDP at constant prices) in the year <math>t</math> is : | |||
:<math>PIB_t \text{réel} = p_1^0 \times q_1^t + p_2^0 \times q_2^t</math> | :<math>PIB_t \text{réel} = p_1^0 \times q_1^t + p_2^0 \times q_2^t</math> | ||
A change in nominal GDP may therefore be due to a change in prices (good 1 and/or good 2) and/or a change in quantities produced (good 1 and/or good 2): | |||
:<math>PIB_t = (\Delta p_1^t \times q_1^t + \Delta q_1^t \times p_1^t) + ( \Delta p_2^t \times q_2^t + \Delta q_2^t \times p_2^t</math>) | :<math>PIB_t = (\Delta p_1^t \times q_1^t + \Delta q_1^t \times p_1^t) + ( \Delta p_2^t \times q_2^t + \Delta q_2^t \times p_2^t</math>) | ||
But only a change in quantities can change real GDP : | |||
:<math>\Delta PIB_t \text{réel} = \Delta q_1^t \times p_1^0 + \Delta q_2^t \times p_2^0</math> | :<math>\Delta PIB_t \text{réel} = \Delta q_1^t \times p_1^0 + \Delta q_2^t \times p_2^0</math> | ||
== | == The GDP deflator == | ||
The GDP deflator is the index by which nominal GDP must be divided to obtain real GDP. It is therefore given by : | |||
GDP Deflator = <math>\frac {PIB\, nominal\, (= p_1^t \times q_1^t + p_2^t \times q_2^t)} {PIB\, \text{real}\,(=p_1^0 \times q_1^t + p_2^0 \times q_2^t)} \times 100</math> | |||
And so: | |||
Real GDP = math>\frac {PIB\, nominal}{\text{GDP deflator}} \times 100</math> | |||
and, approximately, | |||
:% | :% change nominal GDP ≈ % change real GDP + % change GDP deflator | ||
In the previous example, between 2003 and 2005 prices increased by 140%. | |||
== | == Real and nominal GDP: example == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel et nominal exemple 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro PIB réel et nominal exemple 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
= | = GDP as a welfare measure = | ||
== | == Technical Reviews of National Accounts == | ||
The reliability of the data depends on the degree of sophistication of the statistical apparatus (and other possible internal priorities: see the case of China, The Economist, 01.03.2008). Sometimes indirect rather than direct estimates are preferred because of a lack of accounting data. | |||
The national accounts do not take into account the "weight" of underground activities and undeclared work. Moreover, it records production (flows) rather than wealth (stocks). | |||
It is an indicator of quantitative rather than qualitative changes and does not take into account the wealth produced and consumed by the individual (self-consumption) or voluntary work (cf. FSO, 01.11.2004, on the estimation of unpaid work in Switzerland). | |||
== | == GDP as a measure of well-being == | ||
GDP is also used by economists to measure the well-being of individuals in an economy. | |||
Dividing GDP by population gives the average income of individuals in a society. This is often used as a proxy for the level of well-being and development of an economy. | |||
In principle a higher GDP per capita indicates a higher standard of living and a higher stage of development. | |||
Problem: This is clearly not an ideal indicator because it focuses on only part of what influences the quality of life of individuals and the level of development of countries. According to some economists, alternative measures of well-being should be developed that take into account factors other than GDP (cf. The Economist, 17.09.2009). | |||
Example => Human Development Index (United Nations Human Development Index); Green GDP in China, etc. | |||
== | == GDP per capita cannot capture everything == | ||
[[Fichier:Intromacro PIB par tête ne peut pas tout capturer 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | [[Fichier:Intromacro PIB par tête ne peut pas tout capturer 1.png|400px|vignette|centré]] | ||
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:::<math> HDI = 1/3\, Life\, expectancy\, index\, + 1/3\, Education\, achievement\, index\, + 1/3\, GDP\, per\, capita\, index</math> | :::<math> HDI = 1/3\, Life\, expectancy\, index\, + 1/3\, Education\, achievement\, index\, + 1/3\, GDP\, per\, capita\, index</math> | ||
What about environmental depreciation (environmental capital)? What about the value of leisure time? What about income inequality? ... Shouldn't these factors also be taken into account when assessing quality of life? | |||
== | == Measuring Social Well-Being == | ||
<youtube>QUaJMNtW6GA</youtube> | |||
This is leading some economists to think about a new way of measuring quality of life (e.g. Stiglitz: see his video + article) that: | |||
# | #takes into account the depreciation of environmental capital | ||
# | #is based on the concept of "national" rather than "domestic" (more appropriate in a globalized world) | ||
# | #considers income inequality (going to the limit to [[The egalitarian theory of distributive justice by John Rawls|Rawls' ideas]]: the level of well-being of a society = the level of well-being of the lowest) | ||
# | #and considers the value of leisure | ||
The problem is that the introduction of these concepts is not trivial. It is necessary to be able to give an economic value to 1), 3) and 4), which is not obvious, and it is necessary to construct reliable and internationally comparable data series . | |||
Pending a better indicator, GDP per capita continues to be used as a measure of the level of well-being . | |||
The problem is that the accounting framework used to measure quality of life (GDP) is not without consequences for the objectives that politicians and government set themselves. Very little weight will be given to increasing inequality, environmental degradation, etc., if the measure of a country's success is GDP. | |||
On the other hand, it has also been argued that GDP per capita is an indicator that is very highly correlated with many other variables influencing quality of life. In general, it is in the richest countries that we have enough resources to invest in environmental protection, that we find relatively high levels of education and health, that we can afford to pay attention to workers' free time, that inequalities are less striking, and so on. | |||
<gallery mode="packed-hover" widths=200px heights=200px> | <gallery mode="packed-hover" widths=200px heights=200px> | ||
PIB par tête et mortalité infantile.png| | PIB par tête et mortalité infantile.png|GDP per capita and infant mortality. | ||
PIB par tête et alphabétisation.png| | PIB par tête et alphabétisation.png|GDP per capita and literacy. | ||
PIB par tête et espérance de vie.png| | PIB par tête et espérance de vie.png|GDP per capita and life expectancy. | ||
PIB par tête et faim.png| | PIB par tête et faim.png|GDP per capita and hunger. | ||
PIB par tête et indice de Gini.png| | PIB par tête et indice de Gini.png|GDP per capita and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gini_coefficient Gini index]. | ||
PIB par tête et indice de développement humain (IDH).png| | PIB par tête et indice de développement humain (IDH).png|GDP per capita and Human Development Index (HDI). | ||
PIB par tête et IDH dans les pays à revenu élevé de l'OCDE.png| | PIB par tête et IDH dans les pays à revenu élevé de l'OCDE.png|GDP per capita and HDI in high-income OECD countries. | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
= | = Summary = | ||
GDP is the value of output at market prices of all goods and services produced within an economy over a certain period of time. | |||
There are other definitions of aggregate income that take into account, for example, the depreciation of capital with which income is produced (NDP), or the output of nationals across borders (GNP). | |||
GDP can be broken down into four components: consumption, investment, government expenditure and trade balance... | |||
The difference between nominal and real GDP is given by price developments in the economy. | |||
The GDP deflator measures the change in the price level in an economy. | |||
GDP per capita is a good measure of the level of development or quality of life in an economy. | |||
But it is far from a perfect measure because it does not take into account leisure time, the impact on the environment, income inequality and so on. | |||
= Annexes = | = Annexes = |
Version actuelle datée du 31 mars 2020 à 19:58
Professeur(s) | |
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Cours | Introduction to Macroeconomics |
Lectures
- Introductory aspects of macroeconomics
- Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
- Consumer Price Index (CPI)
- Production and economic growth
- Unemployment
- Financial Market
- The monetary system
- Monetary growth and inflation
- Open Macroeconomics: Basic Concepts
- Open Macroeconomics: the Exchange Rate
- Equilibrium in an open economy
- The Keynesian approach and the IS-LM model
- Aggregate demand and supply
- The impact of monetary and fiscal policies
- Trade-off between inflation and unemployment
- Response to the 2008 Financial Crisis and International Cooperation
Gross domestic product (GDP) is one of the major aggregates in the national accounts.
GDP and its components[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP as a measure of economic performance[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
When we have to judge whether an economy is doing well or not, it is natural to look at the total income earned by each individual.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is ONE measure of the income and expenditure of an economy. For an economic system as a whole, income must necessarily equal total expenditure because each transaction has a buyer and a seller and each franc of expenditure by a buyer represents one franc of income for a bidder.
The equality of income and expenditure can be illustrated through the flow of the economy. There are three views of GDP.
The economic circuit (simplified)[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Definition of GDP[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP is a measure of the income that has been generated by an economy. It is a measure that helps the economist judge a country's economic performance.
GDP is the value at market prices of all final goods and services produced within an economy over a certain period of time.
- « value at market prices »: production is valued at market price. To be able to add apples and oranges, a common unit of measurement is needed. An alternative would be to value them at factor costs.
- « of all final goods & services »: final because we want to avoid double counting intermediate goods (=> we consider value added = total production - purchases of intermediate goods). Of course all goods produced and traded legally on a market are included (self-consumption or products of the underground or illegal economy will not be included).
- « products »: this implies that transactions in second-hand goods are not included in GDP because, in this type of transaction, nothing new has been produced to generate income in the economy (= simple redistribution of income). What is produced will not necessarily be sold either, as it may be stored for sale later, but will be included in the current year's GDP because it has generated income in the current year.
- « within an economy »: this implies that what is produced outside the country's borders by nationals is not taken into account and that what is produced by foreigners within the country will be counted in the GDP.
- « for a certain period »: usually a year, or a quarter (seasonal adjustment for quarterly data).
We speak of Gross Domestic Product, as opposed to Net Domestic Product, because we do not take into account the depreciation of the capital that was used to generate this output => (or replacement of worn-out capital).
Other measures[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Other indicators can also be distinguished:
- GNP (Gross National Product): differs from GDP by the Balance of Factor Income Balance, BIFB (= return on capital or labour services).
- 'NIP (Net Internal Product): differs from GDP by the fact that the depreciation of capital needed for production is taken into account in the calculation of aggregate income. For the majority of countries, PIN ≈ (1-10%)GDP.
- 'NNP (Net National Product): makes the two modifications above = .
- 'NNP at factor cost or National Income: is NNP but instead of measuring production at market price it is measured at factor cost (best indicator of a country's productive capacity). Subsidies on production are added to the NNP and indirect taxes on production (VAT for example) are subtracted. This is called national income.
In principle, all these measures and their evolution are highly correlated.
From GDP p.m. to NNP c.f.[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Switzerland's GDP[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
In 2006 the Swiss SBRF was CHF 41.6 billion. For Switzerland (a net exporter of capital and importer of labour services), the GNP is higher than the GDP. In countries such as Argentina or Barbados, on the other hand, GDP is 1% to 10% higher than GNP, because these countries are net importers of capital (income must be paid to the foreign owners of this capital, and therefore the balance of factor income balance (SBRF) is negative).
NNP versus GDP[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
The three lenses[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
The three lenses offer three interpretations of GDP as well as three ways of calculating it.
The production perspective: the value of the final annual production of residents in terms of flows = sum of the values added.
Income perspective: the total income of all members of the economy = distribution of the sum of value added among economic agents (wages + return on capital).
Expenditure perspective: the total expenditure devoted to the acquisition of the B&S produced by this economy = use of the product by the various groups of agents.
These three measures are necessarily equivalent (cf. FSO data 1990-2007).
Production perspective[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
- GDP = the sum of value added
The added value is the increase in the value of the products resulting from the production process. In the national accounts, the added value is obtained by balance :
- Added Value = value of production - intermediate consumption
Intermediate goods and added value: GDP only includes the value of final goods!
Example - hamburger macdo :
- Price of the purchased meat (150 gr.) = 0.50 Frs (hp: no purchase of intermediate goods)
- Sale price hamburger = 2.00 Frs
- MacDo added value = 1.50 Frs
- The GDP is the sum of the added values, here 0.50 + 1.50 = 2.00 Frs (and not 2.50!) = value of the final goods (here only one).
Income perspective[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
- GDP = Σ of compensation of factors of production - production subsidies + indirect taxes + depreciation
As we have seen, if to GDP we add factor income from the rest of the world and subtract factor income paid to the rest of the world, we obtain the National Product (NP).
The NATIONAL product (e.g. GNP) includes all the production carried out by residents both inside and outside the territory. The criterion is therefore that of residence.
The '"INTERNAL product"' (e.g. GDP) covers all production carried out on the territory by both residents and non-residents. The criterion is therefore that of territory.
According to a number of economists, the national product is a better measure of a country's income, especially at a time of strong economic integration (movement of factors between countries) such as today (cf. video by J. Stiglitz).
Expenditure perspective: the components of GDP[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP = Production = Consumption + Investment + Public Expenditure + Trade Balance (= Exports - Imports)
- Y ≡ C + I + G + X - M ( = Trade balance)
Y ≡ domestic demand (C + I + G - M) + external demand (X)
This is an accounting identity! Household production is the same as resident consumption plus non-resident net consumption.
- includes household expenditure on durable goods (cars, refrigerators ...), perishable goods (food) and services (health, lawyer, hairdresser ...).
- includes business and household investments (buildings)
- includes only public expenditure on goods and services (social transfers (unemployment, AHV, etc.) and interest on public debt are not included as they are not a counterpart of a good or service produced in the year).
The components of GDP: examples[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Production perspective: an example[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Optique revenu : un exemple[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Expenditure perspective: an example[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
NB: these three alternative ways of calculating GDP give exactly the same result.
PIB réel versus nominal[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Le PIB nominal mesure la production domestique aux prix courants (ceux de l’année en question).
Le PIB réel mesure la production domestique à des prix constants (ceux d’une année de référence).
L’idée est d’avoir une mesure de ce qu’a été réellement produit dans l’économie et que les augmentations ou diminutions du PIB ne soient pas dues simplement à des effets prix (effets nominaux).
Exemple - Economie à 2 biens: hot-dog et hamburgers.
Real and nominal GDP: calculations[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
The real increase in GDP is much less dramatic than the nominal increase, as there is a significant increase in prices during the period.
Nominal vs. actual: more in general[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
In a simplified economy producing only two goods, hot dogs (good 1) and hamburgers (good 2), nominal GDP (or GDP at current prices) in is written :
Sf the prices of hot dogs and hamburgers are respectively p10 and p20 in the initial (base) period, real GDP (or GDP at constant prices) in the year is :
A change in nominal GDP may therefore be due to a change in prices (good 1 and/or good 2) and/or a change in quantities produced (good 1 and/or good 2):
- )
But only a change in quantities can change real GDP :
The GDP deflator[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
The GDP deflator is the index by which nominal GDP must be divided to obtain real GDP. It is therefore given by :
GDP Deflator =
And so:
Real GDP = math>\frac {PIB\, nominal}{\text{GDP deflator}} \times 100</math>
and, approximately,
- % change nominal GDP ≈ % change real GDP + % change GDP deflator
In the previous example, between 2003 and 2005 prices increased by 140%.
Real and nominal GDP: example[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP as a welfare measure[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
Technical Reviews of National Accounts[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
The reliability of the data depends on the degree of sophistication of the statistical apparatus (and other possible internal priorities: see the case of China, The Economist, 01.03.2008). Sometimes indirect rather than direct estimates are preferred because of a lack of accounting data.
The national accounts do not take into account the "weight" of underground activities and undeclared work. Moreover, it records production (flows) rather than wealth (stocks).
It is an indicator of quantitative rather than qualitative changes and does not take into account the wealth produced and consumed by the individual (self-consumption) or voluntary work (cf. FSO, 01.11.2004, on the estimation of unpaid work in Switzerland).
GDP as a measure of well-being[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP is also used by economists to measure the well-being of individuals in an economy.
Dividing GDP by population gives the average income of individuals in a society. This is often used as a proxy for the level of well-being and development of an economy.
In principle a higher GDP per capita indicates a higher standard of living and a higher stage of development.
Problem: This is clearly not an ideal indicator because it focuses on only part of what influences the quality of life of individuals and the level of development of countries. According to some economists, alternative measures of well-being should be developed that take into account factors other than GDP (cf. The Economist, 17.09.2009).
Example => Human Development Index (United Nations Human Development Index); Green GDP in China, etc.
GDP per capita cannot capture everything[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
What about environmental depreciation (environmental capital)? What about the value of leisure time? What about income inequality? ... Shouldn't these factors also be taken into account when assessing quality of life?
Measuring Social Well-Being[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
This is leading some economists to think about a new way of measuring quality of life (e.g. Stiglitz: see his video + article) that:
- takes into account the depreciation of environmental capital
- is based on the concept of "national" rather than "domestic" (more appropriate in a globalized world)
- considers income inequality (going to the limit to Rawls' ideas: the level of well-being of a society = the level of well-being of the lowest)
- and considers the value of leisure
The problem is that the introduction of these concepts is not trivial. It is necessary to be able to give an economic value to 1), 3) and 4), which is not obvious, and it is necessary to construct reliable and internationally comparable data series .
Pending a better indicator, GDP per capita continues to be used as a measure of the level of well-being .
The problem is that the accounting framework used to measure quality of life (GDP) is not without consequences for the objectives that politicians and government set themselves. Very little weight will be given to increasing inequality, environmental degradation, etc., if the measure of a country's success is GDP.
On the other hand, it has also been argued that GDP per capita is an indicator that is very highly correlated with many other variables influencing quality of life. In general, it is in the richest countries that we have enough resources to invest in environmental protection, that we find relatively high levels of education and health, that we can afford to pay attention to workers' free time, that inequalities are less striking, and so on.
GDP per capita and Gini index.
Summary[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
GDP is the value of output at market prices of all goods and services produced within an economy over a certain period of time.
There are other definitions of aggregate income that take into account, for example, the depreciation of capital with which income is produced (NDP), or the output of nationals across borders (GNP).
GDP can be broken down into four components: consumption, investment, government expenditure and trade balance...
The difference between nominal and real GDP is given by price developments in the economy.
The GDP deflator measures the change in the price level in an economy.
GDP per capita is a good measure of the level of development or quality of life in an economy.
But it is far from a perfect measure because it does not take into account leisure time, the impact on the environment, income inequality and so on.
Annexes[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
- Produit intérieur et taux de change à court terme
- Données OFS 1990-2007
- Le travail non rémunéré mesuré pour la première fois en tant que grandeur économique, OFS, 01.11.2004
- An aberrant abacus, The Economist, 01.03.2008
- Joe Stiglitz à propos du PIB: GDP fetishism, The Berkeley Electronic Press, 09.2009 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QUaJMNtW6GA
- Measuring what matters, The Economist, 17.09.2009
- Australian Bureau of Statistics Manual on GDP measurement
- GDP-indexed bonds
- OECD GDP chart
- UN Statistical Databases
- World Development Indicators (WDI) at Worldbank.org
- World GDP Chart (since 1960)
- Gross National Happiness USA United States-based non-profit working to increase collective well-being by changing how we measure progress and success.
- Bureau of Economic Analysis: Official United States GDP data
- Historicalstatistics.org: Links to historical statistics on GDP for countries and regions, maintained by the Department of Economic History at Stockholm University.
- Quandl - GDP by country - downloadable in CSV, Excel, JSON or XML
- Historical US GDP (yearly data), 1790–present, maintained by Samuel H. Williamson and Lawrence H. Officer, both professors of economics at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
- Historical US GDP (quarterly data), 1947–present
- Google – public data: GDP and Personal Income of the U.S. (annual): Nominal Gross Domestic Product
- The Maddison Project of the Groningen Growth and Development Centre at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands. This project continues and extends the work of Angus Maddison in collating all the available, credible data estimating GDP for countries around the world. This includes data for some countries for over 2,000 years back to 1 CE and for essentially all countries since 1950.
- Gross Domestic Product: An Economy’s All, International Monetary Fund.
- Stiglitz JE, Sen A, Fitoussi J-P. Mismeasuring our Lives: Why GDP Doesn't Add Up, New Press, New York, 2010
- What's wrong with the GDP?
- Whether output and CPI inflation are mismeasured, by Nouriel Roubini and David Backus, in Lectures in Macroeconomics
- Rodney Edvinsson, Erreur Lua : impossible de créer le processus : proc_open n’est pas disponible. Vérifiez la directive de configuration PHP « disable_functions ».
- Clifford Cobb, Ted Halstead and Jonathan Rowe. "If the GDP is up, why is America down?" The Atlantic Monthly, vol. 276, no. 4, October 1995, pages 59–78
- Jerorn C.J.M. van den Bergh, "Abolishing GDP"
- GDP and GNI in OECD Observer No246-247, Dec 2004-Jan 2005
- Progress, what progress? in OECD Observer No272 March 2009
- Coyle, Diane (2014). GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15679-8.
- Australian Bureau for Statistics, Australian National Accounts: Concepts, Sources and Methods, 2000. Retrieved November 2009. In depth explanations of how GDP and other national accounts items are determined.
- United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, "Concepts and Methods of the United States National Income and Product Accounts" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-11-08. Retrieved 2018-03-09.. Retrieved November 2009. In depth explanations of how GDP and other national accounts items are determined.
- CIA Factbook 2006 - Classement des pays par le PIB
- Classement des pays et territoires par PIB, PopulationData.net
- Classement des pays et États par PIB, NationMaster.com
- Produit intérieur brut - Statistiques de l'OCDE
- Au-delà du PIB - Documentations de la conférence internationale organisée par la Commission européenne, le Parlement européen, le Club de Rome, l'OCDE et le WWF
- Dominique Méda, Qu'est-ce que la richesse ?, Aubier , 1999 puis Champs-Flammarion, 2001.
- Dominique Méda, Au-delà du PIB. Pour une autre mesure de la richesse, Flammarion, Champs-Actuel, 2008.
- Jean-Paul Piriou, La comptabilité nationale, éditions La Découverte, Repères, 2006.
References[modifier | modifier le wikicode]
- ↑ Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Genève
- ↑ Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur le site de l'Université de Neuchâtel
- ↑ Page personnelle de Federica Sbergami sur Research Gate
- ↑ Researchgate.net - Nicolas Maystre
- ↑ Google Scholar - Nicolas Maystre
- ↑ VOX, CEPR Policy Portal - Nicolas Maystre
- ↑ Nicolas Maystre's webpage
- ↑ Cairn.info - Nicolas Maystre
- ↑ Linkedin - Nicolas Maystre
- ↑ Academia.edu - Nicolas Maystre