1.4 Uses Of National Income Data Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main uses of national income data?

A
  • determine economic growth
  • estimate tax revenues
  • estimate welfare expenditure
  • assess inflationary pressure
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2
Q

What are the limitations of national income data?

A
  • distribution of income
  • composition of GDP
  • shadow economy
  • non-marketed output
  • negative externalities
  • non-financial factors
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3
Q

Why is distribution of income a limitation of national income data?

A
  • income inequality may be present and reduces the reliability in measuring the country’s living standards
  • lots of people significantly lower than the GDP per capita
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4
Q

Why is composition of GDP a limitation of national income data?

A
  • how it is generates matters and may not contribute significantly to living standards
  • e.g in some countries military expenditure is a very important contributor to GDP, but it does not add much to the general living standards of the population = would be better on education or health
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5
Q

Why is the shadow economy a limitation of national income data?

A
  • unrecorded transactions add to the living standards of the population but do not show up in GDP
  • UKs shadow market is 10% of its actual GDP
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6
Q

Shadow economy definition

A

The value of transactions which are not recorded in the official national income data, often illegal transactions

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7
Q

Why is non-marked output a limitation of national income data?

A
  • goods and services that are not payed for add to peoples wellbeing and their standard of living but do not show up in GDP
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8
Q

Examples of non-marketed output

A
  • babysitting (for free by family members)

- DIY

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9
Q

Non-marketed output defenition

A

Transactions which occur without a monetary payment being made in exchange for a good or service

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10
Q

Why are negative externalities a limitation of national income data?

A
  • additions to GDP often generate negative externalities which reduce the standard of living
  • e.g pollution and traffic congestion
  • therefore increases in GDP can lead to a reduction in standard of living
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11
Q

Why are non-financial factors a limitation of national income data?

A
  • there are other factors which add to peoples general quality of life
  • e.g
    Quality of healthcare provision
    Education provision
    Individuals freedom - speech, gender
    Amount of leisure time on average
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12
Q

Purchasing power parity definition

A

The exchange rate which would equalise the price of goods and services in different countries once converted into the same currency

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13
Q

How to calculate PPP

A
  • basket of goods and services costs £1000 and $1500

- PPP exchange rate is £1 : $1.50

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14
Q

What is the problem with the PPP?

A

It assumes the goods are identical, which highly likely they are not

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15
Q

Why do we use PPP?

A

To make comparisons of living standards between countries by converting GDP into a common exchange rate

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