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What is GDP? | CNBC Explains - YouTube
Channel: CNBC International
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How do you measure the
size of an entire economy?
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Let鈥檚 say I buy a coffee
here in London for 拢3.
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Those 拢3 are factored into
the United Kingdom鈥檚 GDP.
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And so is this barista鈥檚 salary.
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And this espresso machine.
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In fact, most of what鈥檚
around you is part of GDP.
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GDP is an important gauge of the overall
health of an economy. It stands for:
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Simply put, GDP measures the total value
of all goods and services in a country.
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That means it measures a lot
of stuff worth a lot of money.
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Here in the U.K., GDP is around
two-and-a-half trillion dollars per year.
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In the United States, the world鈥檚 biggest
economy, it's around $19 trillion every year.
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How do you get to these numbers?
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Well, you can calculate GDP in a few different ways,
but the most commonly used equation goes like this:
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consumption plus investment plus government
spending plus net exports equals GDP.
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Let鈥檚 break that down.
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Consumption is another way
of saying consumer spending.
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It鈥檚 the money you or I spend on physical goods,
like coffee, and on services, like a haircut.
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In many developed economies
like the U.K. or the U.S.,
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consumer spending makes up
more than half of a country鈥檚 GDP.
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The second part of the
GDP equation is investment.
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This measures how much businesses spend
on things like buildings, land and equipment.
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It also includes a major consumer
investment - buying a home.
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Investment can take a hit when
the economy is suffering.
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You can see that in this chart
domestic business investment
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plummeted in the U.S.
during the financial crisis.
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That鈥檚 because companies were
trying to save money instead of
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putting it toward things like factories,
machinery and equipment.
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Okay, now we get to
government spending.
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This is the money local, state and national governments
spend on things like roads, schools and defense.
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Government spending varies a lot depending on each
country鈥檚 approach to public goods and services.
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Take for example France, where government
spending amounts to roughly 56% of GDP.
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That鈥檚 compared to 41% in
the U.K. and 38% in the U.S.
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That brings us to the final part of the GDP
calculation: net exports, or exports minus imports.
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A lot of countries have negative net exports, meaning
they bring in more products than they send out.
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For example, the U.K. imports around
$1 billion worth of coffee every year
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but only exports around $315 million, meaning
its net exports of coffee are negative.
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Countries around the world collect data on consumption,
investment, government spending and net exports.
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This makes GDP a universal measurement and a
way for countries to stack up against one another.
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But it鈥檚 not just the sum of
the equation people look at.
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You'll often hear about the GDP growth rate,
or the percentage change in GDP over time.
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Generally, if an economy is
healthy, GDP growth expands.
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If an economy is in bad shape,
GDP growth contracts.
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Two consecutive quarters of negative GDP
growth are referred to as a recession.
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But GDP doesn鈥檛 always give
a full picture of the economy.
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Critics say the equation puts too much
weight on production and manufacturing,
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and not enough on services
and the digital economy.
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Just think of Spotify. For $10 a month you can listen
to unlimited music from a huge range of artists.
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In the past, you would have had to buy all of those
albums separately, with each one contributing to GDP.
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It鈥檚 hard to factor a digital service
like Spotify into the GDP equation
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which is used to measuring
physical goods.
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GDP also doesn鈥檛 measure
economic equality and well-being.
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So even if a country is really rich according
to GDP, wealth may be spread unevenly.
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Plus, GDP excludes unpaid work like
volunteering for charity or child care.
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And it doesn't factor in costs
like pollution or illegal activity.
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Some experts have come up with
alternative measures to GDP
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that measure overall happiness
and quality of life.
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But so far, none of these have stuck.
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Maybe it鈥檚 just too hard to put an economic
value on that first sip of morning joe.
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Hey everyone, Elizabeth here. Thanks
so much for watching our video.
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Be sure to check out more of
your CNBC Explains over here.
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And leave us any other ideas
in the comments section.
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Talk to you later!
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