To understand what is meant by GDP, let’s consider each term separately. Let’s start with the term “domestic.” The adjective “domestic” replaced the previous adjective “national” in the 1970s. Before that time we talked about Gross National Product, not Gross Domestic Product. The difference between the two is usually small, but it makes a good question for grilling students. GDP is a measure of gross final domestic output, where “domestic” means output physically produced in the United States, and “national” means output produced by US national firms and citizens. The domestic production measure is used by most countries around the world and is easier to measure than the national production since, with globalization, it is hard to tell what is a US firm and what is a foreign firm. So “domestic” is simply a descriptor of some technical issues about measuring aggregate output.
Let’s next consider the term “gross.” In aggregate income accounting, the term “gross” has a specific meaning. It means that the measure includes production that is used for investment, and thus will not be available for consumption by government or consumers. After one subtracts that investment, one has net domestic product (NDP) and it is NDP that represents the output available for private and government consumption. Net production is gross production minus investment. The reason economists don’t focus on NDP, and instead focus on GDP is that we don’t have good measures of investment. To arrive at NDP we generally simply subtract a set percentage — what is called a capital consumption allowance. Given that fact, we often use the GDP measure as a proxy for final output of the economy.
Finally, let’s consider the meaning of the third term “product.” “Product” in aggregate income accounting is just another term for output. One could have as well called it gross domestic output. Skousen [2014], in his Wall Street Journal valedictory op-ed article calls his concept of gross output a “better economic measure” than GDP because it is a supply-side statistic that measures the production side of the economy, whereas the current measure of output, GDP, measure the demand side of the economy. That characterization doesn’t fit with the aggregate accounting conventions; GDP is a measure of the productive side of the economy just as much as gross output is.
—David Colander, “Gross Output: A New Revolutionary Way to Confuse Students about Measuring the Economy,” Eastern Economic Journal 40, no. 4 (September 2014): 452-453.
—David Colander, “Gross Output: A New Revolutionary Way to Confuse Students about Measuring the Economy,” Eastern Economic Journal 40, no. 4 (September 2014): 452-453.
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