An increase in _______ GDP guarantees that more goods and services are being produced by an economy.

  1. nominal

  2. real

Short Answer

Expert verified

Option (b): real

Step by step solution

01

Explanation for the correct option “b”

The real GDP calculates the national income of an economy in real terms. It helps in comparing the GDP in different years according to the base year. The comparison explains whether the increase has occurred by a rise in prices or the quantity produced.

The real GDP is calculated based on constant prices to remove the price effect from the total production value.

For example, suppose there is a one-good economy. The price of a good increased from $2 to $6 in year 2, and the output decreased from $250 units to $100 units in year 2. The real GDP is calculated at the base year prices (=$2). Thus, the real GDP in year 1 would be $500 (=2×250) and $200 (=2×100) in year 2.

There is a fall in GDP from $500 in year 1 to $200 in year 2. The fall in the value is due to the fall in output production.

02

Explanation for the incorrect option “a”

The nominal GDP is just a monetary estimate of the total production in an economy during the year. It does not tell anything about the quantity of production.

It is calculated based on prevailing market prices. Therefore, it will include the price effect in the calculation of the economy’s worth.

For example, suppose there is a one-good economy. The price of a good increased from $2 to $6 in year 2, and the output decreased from $250 units to $100 units in year 2. The total GDP increased from $500 (=2×250) to $600 (=6×100) despite a fall in output production(150 units=250-100). This is the nominal GDP. The increase in the value comes from the prices and not from the output.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

A mathematical approximation called the rule of 70 tells us how long it

will take for something to double in size if it grows at a constant rate. The

doubling time is approximately equal to the number 70 divided by the percentage

rate of growth. Thus, if Panama’s real GDP per person is growing at 7 percent per

year, it will take about 10 years (= 70/7) to double. Apply the rule of 70 to solve the

following problem: Real GDP per person in Panama in 2017 was about \(15,000

per person, while it was about \)60,000 per person in the United States. If real GDP

per person in Panama grows at the rate of 5 percent per year, about how long will ittake Panama’s real GDP per person to reach the level that the United States was

at in 2017? (Hint: How many times would Panama’s 2017 real GDP per person

have to double to reach the United States’ 2017 real GDP per person?)

Catalog companies are committed to selling at the prices printed in their catalogs. If a catalog company finds its inventory of sweaters rising, what does that tell you about the demand for sweaters? Was it unexpectedly high, unexpectedly low, or as expected? If the company could change the price of sweaters, would it raise the price, lower the price, or keep the price the same? Given that the company cannot change the price of sweaters, however, consider the number of sweaters it orders each month from the company that manufactures the sweaters. If inventories become very high, will the catalog company increase orders, decrease orders, or keep orders the same? Given what the catalog company does with its orders, what is likely to happen to employment and output at the sweater manufacturer?

If an economy has fully flexible prices and demand unexpectedly increases, you would expect the economy’s real GDP to:

  1. increase.

  2. decrease.

  3. remain the same.

Suppose that Glitter Gulch, a gold mining firm, increased its sales revenues on newly mined gold from \(100 million to \)200 million between one year and the next. Assuming that the price of gold increased by 100 percent over the same period, by what numerical amount did Glitter Gulch’s real output change? If the price of gold had not changed, what would have been the change in Glitter Gulch’s real output?

How does investment as defined by economists differ from investment as defined by the general public? What would happen to the amount of economic investment made today if firms expect the future returns to such investment to be very low? What would happen to the amount of economic investment today if firms expect future returns to be very high?

See all solutions

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free