Cape Unit 2 Economics Module 1 - Topic 1 - National Income Accounting

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    ContentsEconomics - Unit 2 ....................................................................................................................................... 3

    TOPIC 1: National Income Accounting........................................................................................................ 3

    1. Circular Flow of Income ................................................................................................................... 3

    1) Basic model/Closed private economy........................................................................................... 4

    2) Closed Economy model/Three Sector model................................................................................ 5

    Open Economy Model .......................................................................................................................... 7

    2. National Income Accounting ................................................................................................................ 8

    GNP....................................................................................................................................................... 8

    Net Domestic Product ........................................................................................................................... 8

    Net National Product ............................................................................................................................. 8

    Avoidance of Multiple Counting .............................................................................................................. 8

    Value Added ......................................................................................................................................... 9

    Exclusion of Non-Production Transactions .......................................................................................... 9

    3. Measuring GDP .............................................................................................................................. 10

    The Expenditure Approach ................................................................................................................. 10

    Components ........................................................................................................................................ 10

    The Income Approach ............................................................................................................................. 12

    Components ........................................................................................................................................ 12

    Adjustments of National Income ........................................................................................................ 13

    Other Types of Income ........................................................................................................................... 14

    Personal Income .................................................................................................................................. 14

    Disposable Income .............................................................................................................................. 14

    4. Interpreting National Income statistics ........................................................................................... 15

    5. Uses Of National Income Accounts................................................................................................ 16

    6. Nominal & Real GDP ..................................................................................................................... 17

    Definition ............................................................................................................................................ 17

    The Adjustment Process Between Nominal and Real GDP.................................................................... 18

    Price Index .............................................................................................................................................. 18

    GDP Deflator .......................................................................................................................................... 18

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    7. Limitations of GDP ......................................................................................................................... 20

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    Economics - Unit 2

    TOPIC 1: National Income Accounting

    This second unit of the CAPE Economics Syllabus focuses on macroeconomics.

    Specific Objectives

    1.

    Explain the circular flow of income

    2.

    Explain the concept of national income accounting

    3.

    Explain the different ways of deriving national income accounts

    4.

    Interpret national income accounts

    5.

    Use national income accounts to analyse the performanc

    e of the economy as a whole

    6.

    Derive real GDP from nominal GDP

    7.

    Explain the limitations of GDP

    Macroeconomics is the branch of economics that studies economic aggregates1/grand totals. An example

    of an aggregate would be the level of unemployment in the country, or the inflation rate.

    1. Circular Flow of Income

    It is a model of economy that shows the circular flow of expenditures and incomes that result from

    decision makers' choices and the way those choices interact to determine what, how, and for whom goods

    and services are produced (Bade & Parkin 2009).

    There circular flow consists of certain economic units or economic agents. These are:

    Households

    Firms

    Government

    International sector

    Financial institutions

    The circular flow therefore shows the interaction between the economic agents. These flows can be real

    of monetary in nature.

    1An aggregate is a collection of individual economic units which are lumped together and treated as if they are a

    single unit.

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    1)

    Basic model/Closed private economy

    For our analysis we will start with a simplified model. It shows a purely private economy which has two

    sectors:

    1.

    The household sector which:

    supplies the four resources

    purchases goods and services produced by firms

    2.

    The business sector consists of firms which:

    hire the factors of production

    produce goods and services

    The model has two markets:

    1.

    The resource/factor market in which resources or the services of resource suppliers are bought

    and sold (McConnell & Bruce 2007). Households exchange their factors with businesses that pay

    for their use with money or factor payments.

    2.

    The product market in which businesses provided final goods and services to households which

    pay for them with money.

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    Figure 1.1: Two Sector Circular Flow of Income Model

    The inner arrows represent real flows of goods and services. The outer arrows represent money

    flows.

    2)

    Closed Economy model/Three Sector model

    The model can be extended to three sectors where the government is fully integrated into the real and

    monetary flows that make up the economy. Government has to purchase from both:

    1.

    the product market where it will purchase computers and equipment (for example to patch roads)

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    2.

    the resource market where it will hire military service personnel, police and teachers

    Figur e 1.2: Three Sect or Circu lar Flow/Closed Economy Model

    The Government provides public goods and services to both households and businesses (for example

    roads, bridges and schools). These public goods and services can only be provided if government has

    funds and these are raised via taxes paid by both households and businesses

    NB - *acknowledges that government provides transfer payments to households in the form of

    social security payments, and provides subsidies to businesses and concessions. Hence for:

    households: Net Taxes = Taxeswelfare and/or social security payments

    businesses: Net Taxes = Taxes (corporate and sales)subsidies and/or tax concessions

    Analysis of the Circular F low

    1. The three sector model indicates how government can alter the way income is distributed since it

    reallocates resources and changes up the level of economic activity. The distribution of income is

    more equal because higher tax revenues are drawn from affluent households and transferred to

    low income households through transfer payments.

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    2. The allocation of resources is different when compared with a purely private economy.

    Government will purchase labour resources and goods which may differ from those purchased

    from households. Government reallocates resources to allow for the provision of public goods

    such as health, defence, and roads.

    3. Government can choose to increase expenditure and boost the production of goods and services.It can also increase or decrease taxes or increase transfer payments to raise the level of income in

    the economy and cause consumer spending to rise. Government flows suggest ways that

    government may attempt to stabalise the economy.

    Government spending adds flows of income (an injection) whilst tax payments are a withdrawal (or

    leakage) of potential spending from the flow of income.

    Open Economy Model

    The circular flow can be extended to include the rest of the world. We will remove the real flows to make

    the model less complicated. This model will include the financial market and the rest of the world.

    Example 1

    Draw a circular flow of income diagram of an open economy.

    Solution

    Figur e 1.3: Open Economy Circular Flow of Income

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    The blue arrows represent the inner flow. The red arrows represent the withdrawals from the inner flow.

    The green arrows represent the injections into the circular flow.

    2. National Income Accounting

    National Income Accounting involves the techniques used to measure the overall production of the

    economy and other related variables for the nation as a whole. One of the best available measures of the

    overall production is based on the total output of goods and services .i.e. the aggregate output. This

    aggregate product is measured by its Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    Gross Domestic Product or GDP is the total market value of all final goods and services produced within

    a country in a given year.

    As long as the final goods and services are produced within the country they will contribute to the GDP.

    There are other related variables and these include:

    1.

    Gross National Product

    2.

    Net Domestic Product

    3.

    Net National Product

    GDP measures total spending, income and or output made from home-based resources and therefore

    exports are included. It does not include output made from the nation's resources abroad.

    GNP

    This measures the total output of goods and services produced by the country in the year whether they are

    made from domestically owned resources locally or abroad.

    GNP = GDP + Income earned by Barbadians abroad - Income earned by foreigners in Barbados.

    GNP = GDP + Net property income from abroad

    Net Domestic Product

    GDP gives an exaggerated value of the output available for consumption and for addition of new capital.

    Hence, Net Domestic Product is GDP - Consumption of fixed capital.

    Net National Product

    NNP is GNP - Depreciation or Capital Consumption (Consumption of Fixed Capital)

    Recall that GDP is the total final value of all goods and services produced within a country in one year.

    Avoidance of Multiple Counting

    In order to measure output accurately the goods and services produced in a given year must only be

    counted once. The majority of products go through a series of production stages before they reach the

    market. Hence, the parts of some products may be bought and sold many times. GDP will only include

    the market value of final goods and ignores transactions involving intermediate goods.

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    A final good or service is ultimately purchased for use by the consumer and is not for further resale or

    purchasing. For example, a new sofa.

    An intermediate good or service is purchased for further processing and manufacturing or resale. For

    example, molasses.

    Example 2

    Let us look at the stages involved in the production of a suit.

    Stage 1 Sheep rancher, Firm A, provides $200 worth of wool.

    Stage 2 The wool processor, Firm B, sells the processed wool to a suit manufacturer for $240.

    Stage 3 The suit manufacturer, Firm C, sells it to a clothing wholesaler for $300.

    Stage 4 The clothing wholesaler, Firm D, sells it to the clothing retailer for $350.

    Stage 5 The clothing retailer, Firm E, sells it to the customer for $420.

    Total sales value = 200 + 240 +300 + 350 + 420 = $2510

    Total output = 200 + 40 + 60 +50 + 70 = $420

    Value Added

    This is the market value of a firm's output minus the value of the inputs which it has purchased from

    others.

    Exclusion of Non-Production Transactions

    They are some monetary transactions that are not included in the calculation of GDP.

    These are:

    1. Purely financial transactions. These are three general kinds.

    a. Public transfer payments. Example welfare - These are made to households and firms

    who have not made any contribution to current production.

    b. Private transfer payments. Example gifts and allowances.

    c. Security transactions. Example stocks & bonds - Stock market activity involves

    the exchange of paper assets. The amount spent on these assets does not directly create current

    production. It should be noted that the sales of new issues of securities transfers money from

    savers to businesses. The business then spends this money on capital goods. Therefore these

    transactions might indirectly contribute to spending which actually accounts for current output

    and is added to GDP.

    2. Second Hand Sales - These either reflect no current production or involved multiple counting.

    Since the initial sale would have been in a previous period.

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    3.Measuring GDPThe value of ALLfinal goods and services generated by businesses (TOTAL OUTPUT) is equivalent to

    the amount of money spent by consumers to purchase the output (TOTAL EXPENDITURE).

    TOTAL OUTPUT = TOTAL EXPENDITURE (1)

    Additionally, the expenditure on annual output (TOTAL EXPENDITURE) is equivalent to the cost or the

    factor payments that are derived from producing this year's output (TOTAL INCOME).

    TOTAL EXPENDITURE = TOTAL INCOME (2)

    When equations (1) and (2) are combined the National Income Identity is derived.

    TOTAL INCOME = TOTAL EXPENDITURE = TOTAL OUTPUT (3)

    This identity implies that national income can be calculated using three methods:

    The expenditure approach The income approach

    The output approach

    The Expenditure Approach

    The Expenditure Approach focuses on aggregating of spending all final goods and services generated

    within the economy. This approach calculates GDP.

    Components

    A. Personal Consumption Expenditu res

    This is spending by households

    Non-durable - bread, vitamins

    Durable - fridges, car

    Service - doctor

    The letter C denotes this part of GDP.

    B. Gr oss Private Domestic Investment All final purchases of fixed K(capital) by business enterprises (for example machinery and tools)

    All construction (like new factories, stores)

    Changes in inventory ( increased vol. of unsold finished goods and work in progress)

    Gross Private Domestic Investment (IG) involves the productions of all domestic goods. It includes both

    investments in replacement capital and investment in added capital.

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    Net Private Domestic Investment (IN) - this refers only to investment in added capital.

    IG= IN+ Consumption of Fixed Capital2

    Example 3

    In 1997 the US Private Sector produced and purchased $1238 billion of capital goods. However inproducing that output, it used $900 billion of machinery and equipment. Calculate Net Private Domestic

    Investment.

    Soln: IG= In+ Consumption of Fixed Capital

    In= IG - Consumption of Fixed Capital

    In= $1238 - $900 = $338

    C. Government Pur chased (G)

    All purchases of durables and non-durables in the public sector

    Expenditure to build Government offices

    D. Net exports (Xn)

    This is the amount by which foreign spending on a nation's good and services, exports (X), exceeds the

    nation's spending, on foreign goods and services, imports (M):

    Xn= X - M

    The GDP equation is therefore:

    GDP = C + IG + G + Xn

    OR

    GDP = C + IG + G + XM

    Example 4

    The national accounts of a country are as follows:

    Compensation of employees $4703.

    Rents $148.

    Gross private domestic investment $1238

    Interest $450.

    Proprietors' Income $545.

    2Consumption of fixed Capital is also called depreciation

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    Corporate income tax $319.

    Dividends $336.

    Government $1454

    Undistributed corporate profits $149.

    Net profits -$97

    Indirect business taxes $545

    Consumption of fixed capital $868

    Net foreign factor income earned in the country $21

    Personal consumption expenditures $5489

    Calculate:

    1.

    GDP

    2.

    NDP

    3.

    GNP

    4.

    NNP.

    Solution

    GDP = $5489 + $1238 + $1454 - $97 = $8084

    GNP = $8084 - $21 = $8063

    NDP = $8084 - $868 = $7216

    NNP = $8063 - $868 = $7195

    The Income Approach

    Components

    a. Compensation of Employees

    This is the largest income category and it comprises of payments to labour by private businesses and

    government. It also includes wage and salary supplements (payments by employers into social insurance

    and private pensions, health and welfare funds for workers). These supplements are part of the employer's

    cost of obtaining labour and are treated as a component of the firms total wage payments.

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    b. Rents

    Rent is the payment received by the owners of property resources (households and businesses). It is net

    rent. i.e. Gross rental income minus depreciation.

    c. Interest

    This is the payment received by the suppliers of capital. It is inclusive of interest payments thathouseholds receive on saving deposits and even corporate bonds.

    d. Profi ts

    This includes proprietors' income and corporate profits.

    1. Proprietors' income - this is the income of unincorporated businesses. i.e. sole traders &

    partnerships

    2. Corporate profits - three things happen to corporate profits:

    a. A portion flows to the government as corporate income taxes

    b. They are distributed as dividends.

    c. They may be retained as undistributed corporate profits.

    The summation of a, b, cand dgive national income.

    We can calculate GDP from National Income but three adjustments have to be made.

    Adjustments of National Income

    1. Indirect business taxes - These taxes are treated as cost of production and therefore added to the prices

    of products that are to be sold. They include general sales taxes and excise taxes.

    2. Depreciation or Consumption of Fixed Capital - Capital may be purchased one year and used

    productively for many years after that. Consumption of fixed capital is added to National Income when

    balancing and economy's expenditure and income.

    3. Net Foreign Factor Income - National Income is the total income accruing to the residence of a country

    whether earned domestically or abroad. However GDP measures domestic output. When moving fromNation Income to GDP the income that citizens gain from supplying the sources abroad and the income

    that foreigners gain by supplying resources domestically have to be considered. Net Foreign Factor

    Income must be added to National Income when computing the value of domestic output.

    National Income (NY)

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    Example 5

    Using the information given before

    a. Calculate national income for the country.

    b. Adjust National Income to calculate GDP.

    Soln:

    National Income = Compensation of employees + Rents + Interest + Proprietors' Income + Corporate

    income tax + Dividends + Undistributed corporate profits

    = $4703 + $148 + $450 + $545 + $319 + $336 + $149 = $6650

    GDP = NY + Indirect business taxes + Consumption of fixed capital + Net foreign factor income earnedin the country

    = $6650 + $545+ $868 +21

    = $8084

    Other Types of Income

    Personal Income

    This includes all income received whether earned or unearned. Personal income differs from National

    Income (Income earned) because some income earned is not actually received by households (social

    security payments, corporate income taxes and undistributed corporate profits) also some income that is

    received is not actually earned (National insurance benefits). When moving from National Income to

    Personal Income first subtract income earned but not received and add income received but not actually

    earned.

    Disposable Income

    This is personal income - personal taxes. Personal taxes include personal income taxes, personal property

    taxes and even inheritance taxes. Disposable income is the amount of income that people have available

    for both spending and saving.

    Example 6:

    From the following data find:

    a. national income

    b. Personal Income

    c. Personal Disposable Income

    d. Personal Saving

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    Salaries $1866.3 (National Income)

    Business Interest Payments $ 264.9.(National Income)

    Rent $ 34.1.(National Income)

    Corporate Profits $ 164.8.(National Income)(-Personal Income)

    Proprietors' Income $ 120.3.(National Income)

    Corporate Dividends $ 66.4 (Personal Income)

    Social Security Contributions $ 253.0(-Personal Income)

    Personal Taxes $ 402.1 (-Personal Disposable Income)

    Interest paid by consumers $ 64.4(-Personal Saving)

    Interest paid by government $ 105.1(Personal Income)

    Government and Business Transfers $ 374.5(Personal Income)

    Personal Consumption Expenditures $ 1991.9(-Personal Saving)

    National Income = $2450.4

    Personal Income = $2450.4 - (164.8 - 253.0) + (374.5 + 105.1 + 66.4) = $2578.6

    Personal Disposable Income = $2578.6 - 402.1 = $2176.5

    Personal Saving = Personal Disposable Income - (Interest Paid by consumers + Personal Expenditure) =

    2176.5 - (64.4 +1991.9) = 120.1

    Homework

    Research the Output Approach pg. 388 of Sloman. The page might be different according to the Edition

    that you have.

    4.

    Interpreting National Income statistics

    The calculation of GDP using the expenditure approach reflects the actual prices that consumers pay for

    final goods and services and is therefore called GDP at market prices. This calculation of GDP will

    consist of indirect business taxes like VAT. Additionally, some firms receive subsidies from the

    government to encourage production. GDP measured using the income approach values the cost of the

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    factors of production used to produce goods and services. This reflects GDP at factor costs. Indirect taxes

    make market prices exceed factor costs. Subsidies make factor cost exceed market prices. To move from

    market prices to factor cost:

    GDP at market priceindirect taxes + subsidies = GDP at factor cost

    5.

    Uses Of National Income Accounts

    1.

    It allows us to keep a finger on the economic pulse of a nation. It permits us to measure the level

    of production or economic performance from year to year. We could therefore attempt to explain

    why performance is at that level.

    2.

    By comparing national accounts over a number of years we can track the long run course of the

    economy and seen whether it has grown, has been steady, stagnant or declines.

    3.

    Information supplied by national accounts provides a basis for designing and applying publicpolicies to improve the performance of the economy.

    4.

    It allows for inter-country comparisons. You have to be careful because countries have different

    sizes, climatic conditions and therefore resources. You have to use a per capita measure. GDP per

    capita is GDP/Total Population.

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    6. Nominal & Real GDP

    A nominal value (money) is used as a common denominator to sum a heterogeneous into a

    meaningful whole. The value of different years' outputs can only be usefully compared if the value of

    money does not change because of inflation (rising overall prices) or deflation (falling overall prices).

    Year 1

    Sofa $10 5 = 50

    Chair $20 10 = 200

    250

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    The Adjustment Process Between Nominal and Real GDP

    Price Index

    Example 7

    Assume a country makes blenders according to the following table.

    Year Units of

    output

    Price of

    blenders per

    unit

    Price Index Nominal GDP Real GDP

    1 5 $10 100% $50 50

    2 7 20 200% 140 70

    3 8 25 250% 200 80

    4 10 30 300% 300 100

    5 11 28 280% 308 110

    Suppose the drastic changes in Nominal GDP were a result of inflation shown in column 2 and theremainder owing to the changes in output shown in column 1. Both output and price increases would be

    reflected in nominal GDP. Once the prices changes are known a price index with compares prices

    between years and estimates overall changes in the price level, can be derived.

    Definition - a price index measures the combined prices of a particular collection of goods and services

    called a 'market baskets', in a specified period relative to the combined price of an identical group of

    goods and services in a referenced period. This reference period is called the base year.

    Price Index = Price of market basket in a specified year price of the same market basket in the base year

    x 100

    In our example the base year is year 1.

    In year 2 the price index = 20/10 x 100 = 200

    In order to calculate real GDP use the following formula:

    Real GDP = nominal GDP price index (on hundredths)

    GDP Deflator

    This method is a very direct method. The GDP deflator is basically an index.

    The formula is:

    GDP Deflator = Nominal GDP Real GDP

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    Example 8:

    An economy has the following real GDP and nominal GDP in 1994, 1995, 1996.

    Year Real GDP $bn Nominal GDP $bn

    1994 100 100

    1995 105 120

    1996 120 150

    a. Which year is the base year?

    b. Calculate the GDP deflators.

    c. What is the inflation rate as measured by the GDP deflator between 1995 and 1996?

    d. What is the % increase in the price level as measured by the deflator between 1994 & 1996?

    Soln:

    a. 1994

    b.

    Year Real GDP $bn Nominal GDP $bn GDP Deflator

    1994 100 100 1

    1995 105 120 1.14

    1996 120 150 1.25

    c. 1.251.14 x 100 = 9.65%

    1.14

    d. 1.251 x 100 = 25%

    1

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    Example 9:

    The following table shows nominal GDP and the price index for a group of selected years. Compute real

    GDP. Indicate in each calculation whether you are inflating or deflating the nominal GDP data.

    Year Nominal GDP

    $bn

    Price

    Index(1996=-100)

    1960 527.4 22.19

    1968 911.5 26.29

    1978 2295.9 48.22

    1988 4742.5 80.22

    1998 8790.2 103.22

    Soln

    Year Nominal GDP

    $bn

    Price

    Index(1996=-100)

    Real GDP $bn Inflating/Deflating

    1960 527.4 22.19 2376.75 Inflating

    1968 911.5 26.29 3467.10 Inflating

    1978 2295.9 48.22 4761.30 Inflating

    1988 4742.5 80.22 5911.87 Inflating

    1998 8790.2 103.22 8515.99 Deflating

    7. Limitations of GDP

    GDP gives an indication of the level of production of goods and services and also the level of income.

    Production will therefore be an inadequate indicator of societys well-being.

    1. Non-inclusion of the informal sector - Certain production does not take place in markets. Hence

    the economic activity generated is not included in GDP. The underground economy or the informal sector

    includes both legal and illegal activities.

    Legal activities include:

    Moonlightingpeople working outside their normal job and not declaring the income for tax

    purposes Unemployed individuals who do jobs that they do not declare because they fear that they might

    lose welfare benefits

    Small retailers selling on roadsides, like coconut vendors, people selling clothing and food

    Drivers of taxis, small plumbers

    All of these will be considered as tax avoidance. Tax avoidance is the legal usage of the tax regime to

    one's own advantage, to reduce the amount of tax that is payable by means that are within the law.

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    Therefore it is the lawful minimization of tax liability through sound financial planning techniques

    such as phasing the sale of assets over a period long enough to effect maximum exemption from

    capital gains tax.

    Illegal activities include:

    Gambling

    Prostitution

    The narcotics trade and money laundering

    Tax evasion accounts for all situations where a person, organisation or corporation unlawfully

    attempt to minimize tax liability through fraudulent techniques to circumvent or frustrate tax

    laws, such as deliberate under-statement of taxable income or willful non-payment of due taxes.

    The existence of the informal sector will significantly underestimate the calculation for GDP (refer to the

    Barbados Business Authority of May 24th2009).

    2. Non-payment for do-it-yourself activitiesDo-it-yourself activities include activities done by

    housewives and family members for which no payment is made. The exclusion of these activities

    indicates that GDP statistics understate the true level of production in the economy. If the activities

    increase over time the rate of growth of national output will also be understated. Do-it-yourself activities

    can also be called the NON-Monetary Sector. It also includes subsistence farming and barter.

    3. Non-accounting for externalities, environmental degradationRising national output (especially

    for manufactured products) might have been accompanied by an increase in pollution (carbon emissions

    and destruction of natural habitats). An agricultural sector that increases production and productivity by

    intensive use of pesticides and chemical based fertilizers (like ammonia) can have a negative impact on

    the environment. Pesticides and run-off from fertilizers can end up in underground reservoirs and can

    reduce the quality of ground water which is part of the water supply. GDP statistics do not recordenvironmental side effects of industrial growthpolluted air and waters, toxic waste, ozone depletion and

    global warming. These spill-over costs are not deducted from total output. GDP can therefore overstate

    national economic well-being.

    4. Changing output and changes in the quality of lifeincreased production maybe a result of

    technological change. Alternatively rising national output might be achieved because people are working

    harder or longer hours and having reduced leisure time. Individuals who work longer hours may tend to

    have depressed immune systems, higher stress levels, and sickness is the end result. People will have

    more income and a reduced quality of life. GDO would be of limited use since it does not consider the

    number of hours that people work nor the number of leisure hours available. Additionally if output is

    changing, (that is, there is the production of more capital or defence goods as opposed to consumer goods,then the quality of life would be reduced. Consumer goods and services satisfy immediate wants and

    needs and therefore improve the standard of living. Capital goods are not consumed directly by

    consumers, neither are defence goods. Defence goods add no value to the quality of life. In the long run

    capital goods invigorate growth and enable higher production and therefore consumption of consumer

    goods and services.

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    The production of certain undesirables leads to an increase in GDP. There can be an increase in crime

    levels, alcohol and tobacco. Increased crime levels lead to more expenditure on security and therefore

    increase GDP. Consumer goods such as alcohol and tobacco add to national output but do not necessarily

    add to the quality of life.