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GDP Trends in Indian 
Economy
What is Economy? 
 Production, distribution or trade, and consumption of 
limited goods and services by different agents in a given geographical 
location 
 Can be divided into various sectors:- 
 Primary 
 Secondary 
 Tertiary 
 Quaternary 
 Quinary 
 The Indian economy is the 10th largest in the world by nominal GDP
ECONOMY: SECTORS 
 Most important and the fastest growing sector of Indian economy are 
services. Trade, hotels, transport and communication; financing, insurance, 
real estate and business services and community, social and personal 
services account for more than 60 percent of GDP 
 Agriculture, forestry and fishing constitute around 12 percent of the output, 
but employs more than 50 percent of the labour force 
 Manufacturing accounts for 15 percent of GDP, construction for another 8 
percent and mining, quarrying, electricity, gas and water supply for the 
remaining 5 percent
What is National income? 
 Final outcome of all economic activities of a nation valued in terms 
of money 
 Determinant of the business level and economic status of a 
country 
 It has three different measures :- 
 GDP 
 GNP 
 NNP
GDP 
 Equal to the total expenditures for all final goods and services produced 
within the country in a fixed period of time (usually a 365-day year) 
known as fiscal year 
 Equal to the sum of the value added at every stage of production (the 
intermediate stages) by all the industries within a country, plus taxes 
minus the subsidies on products, in the period 
 Equal to the sum of the income generated by production in the country 
in the period—that is, compensation of employees, taxes on production 
and imports minus the subsidies
GDP adjusting by PPP 
 Ranks 3rd pertaining to purchasing power parity (PPP) acc. to World 
Bank 
 Using a PPP basis is more useful when comparing generalized 
differences in living standards on the whole because, PPP takes into 
account the relative cost of living and the inflation rates of the countries, 
rather than using just exchange rates which may distort the real 
differences in income 
 The GDP in India expanded 0.60 percent in the third quarter of 2012 over 
the previous quarter 
 GDP Growth Rate in India is reported by the OECD(Organisation for 
Economic Co-operation and Development)
GNP and NNP 
 GNP: The value of all final goods and services produced during a 
specific period, usually one year, plus incomes earned abroad by 
he nationals minus incomes earned locally by foreigners 
 NNP: The measure of net output available for consumption by the 
society including consumers, producers and government 
NNP= GNP – depreciation
Difference between GDP, GNP, NNP 
 Net foreign income : factor payments received from the foreign sector 
by domestic citizens and factor payments made to foreign citizens for 
domestic production 
 “Gross” word indicates no allowance for depreciation
Example: 
 Assume that in 2013, a country called A produced only one piece 
of calculator priced at $10.00. To produce this calculator, country A 
used $5.00 worth of factors of production owned by citizens of 
country A and $5.00 worth of factors of production owned by 
citizens of country B. Country B produced one loaf of bread priced 
at $3.00. And to produce this loaf of bread, country B uses $2.00 
worth of factors of produced owned by citizens of Country B and 
$1.00 worth of factors of production owned by Country A.
 The GDP of country A was $10.00. 
Because it produced in its own country a good worth $10.00. It 
does not really matter who owned the factors of production in 
producing the calculator. 
 But what was its GNP? Country A GNP was $6.00. 
Country A citizens contributed $5.00 worth of factors of production 
to produce the calculator AND $1.00 worth of factors to produce the 
bread in Country B. 
 Similarly the GDP and GNP of country B was $3.00 and $7.00 
respectively.
 NNP:- 
Assume that to produce the calculator, country A used a machine 
worth $5.00 and the depreciation rate of that machine in 2013 was 
$1.00. Since its GNP was $6.00 and depreciation was $1.00, the 
NNP for country A was $5.00.
CIRCULAR 
FLOW DIAGRAM 
 It is a visual model of the economy that shows how money 
flows through markets among households and firms. 
 Factors of production are the inputs to the production 
process. There are three basic factors of production: 
land, labor, capital. 
 Factor market is the market where factors of production 
are bought and sold such as market for labor, capital, 
resources, machinery etc. 
 Product market - trades final goods which were produced 
by means of factors of production (from factor market).
 The primary activity of the economy is production or the process of creating a good or 
service that can be used to satisfy human wants. 
 AGGREGATES:- 
 Aggregate Demand is the total amount of goods and services demanded in the 
economy at a given overall price level and in a given time period. 
 ƒAggregate Supply is the total supply of goods and services produced within an 
economy at a given overall price level in a given time period.
MEASURING GDP 
 ƒMonetary Measure. GDP is the monetary value of the total output of goods 
and services produced by an economy within a given period of time (quarterly or annual). 
 ƒNo Double or Multiple Counting. GDP includes only the market value of 
FINAL GOODS (goods and services that are purchased for final use by consumer, not for 
resale, or further processing) and ignores INTERMEDIATE GOODS (goods and 
services that are purchased for resale or for further processing) altogether.
MEASURING GDP 
 I buy your second-hand bike for 15,000 
Rupees, should we including it in the 
Expenditure (C) ? Nope. Because the bike 
Is not ‘produced again. 
 Now, I buy your second-hand bike from an 
auto dealer, (who gets Rs.1000 Commission) 
should we include it in the (C)? Hell Yes, 
because he sold his ‘service’ to me uniquely. 
Every time he sells a second hand product, 
although no new ‘product’ is created 
but new service is delivered by him.
WHAT IF SAME 1000 RUPEE NOTE IS 
CHANGING HANDS? 
 I gave a note of Rs.1000 to that dealer as part of his brokerage and he gives the same Rs.1000 note 
to the electricity company for his monthly bill .Same Rs.1000 note is changing hands so is our GDP =Rs.1000? 
Nope. 
GDP is the money value of everything produced within India. So brokerage service is Rs.1000 separately and the 
electricity produced is also worth Rs.1000 separately. Therefore, Even as same 1000 rupee note is given to both 
parties. 
Total GDP=1000 brokerage+1000 electricity bill=Rs.2000 
If electri.co gives that 1000 rupee note to its peon as salary, then again it has to be counted. Because peon sold 
his unique service separately to the company. So in that case 
Total GDP =‘Brokerage+Electric bill+peon’ salary=Rs.3000
ƒExclusion of Output Produced Abroad by Domestically Owned 
Factors of Production. 
 GDP is the value of output produced by factors of production located within a 
country.
APPROACHESTO MEASURING THE 
ECONOMY 
 There are three (3) approaches to measuring GDP/GNP: 
 ƒBy Expenditure 
 By Production 
 By Income 
 TOTALPRODUCTION =TOTALINCOME=TOTAL EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURE APPROACH 
 is a method of computing GDP/GNP that measures the amount spent on all final goods 
during a given period. 
 Thus: 
Y = C + I + G + (X-M)
PERSONAL CONSUMPTION 
EXPENDITURE (C) 
 is spending by households on current needs. These are expenditures on food, beverages, 
tobacco, clothing and footwear, fuel, light, and water, household furnishings, household 
operations, transportation/communications, and miscellaneous expenses.
Three (3) main categories: 
 Durable goods are goods that last a relatively long time (automobiles, furniture, and 
household appliances) 
 Non durable goods are goods consumed immediately or for a short time (food, 
clothing, gasoline, and cigarette) 
 Payment for services are things that people buy that do not involve the production of 
physical items (services of doctors, lawyers, and educational institutions
INVESTMENT (I) 
 is the total investment in capital such as the purchase of new housing, plants, equipment, 
and inventory by the private (or non government) sector.
GOVERNMENT SPENDING 
 is expenditures by the government for final goods and services. These are spending on 
weapons, salaries and wages of public school teachers, police, and other public servants.
NET EXPORTS (X-M) 
 is the difference between the exports (X) and imports (M). Either positive 
(X>M) or negative(M>X). 
Money we get from export is added. 
You remember that GDP means Money value of everything we produce within India. So if 
we import something, it has to be subtracted, because it is not produced within India. 
So formula (for ease In remembering) 
GDP = Consumer+Investor+Governernment + (eXporter – iMporter)
PRODUCTION ORVALUE-ADDED 
APPROACH 
 is a method of computing GDP/GNP that measures the economy based on the contribution of 
industries and sectors to the value of the final goods. 
 It requires three stages of analysis: 
 Gross value of output from all sectors is estimated. 
 Intermediate consumption such as cost of materials, supplies and services used in production 
final output is derived. 
 Then gross output is reduced by intermediate consumption to develop net production. 
 Gross Value Added = Gross Value of output – Value of Intermediate Consumption. 
 Value of Output = Value of the total sales of goods and services + Value of changes in the 
inventories.
EXAMPLE 
 Total money value of everything produced (value added at each stage) 
 Farmer produced Wheat and sold 100 kg of it @ 2000 Rs. (Original value) 
 Flour mill, purchased it, grinded it and sold the flour to baker @ 2500 Rs. (+500 value added 
to previous purchase) 
 Baker made breads, cookies and biscuits and sold the total production @3500 Rs to its final 
customers. (+1000 value added to previous purchase) 
 what is total ‘GDP’ here? 
2000+2500+3500=8000 Rs? Hell no! You’ve to see the value added. 
So, total money value of this line is: 2000+500+1000=3500. 
Not all of the wheat goes into Baker’s oven. Some of it will go in making beer, some in a 
normal household for making roti and so on. You’ve to track the value added in each different 
line.
INCOME APPROACH 
 Sum total of incomes of individuals living in a country during 1 year . 
 Another way of measuring GDP is to measure total income. If GDP is calculated this way it is 
sometimes called Gross Domestic Income (GDI), or GDP(I). 
 An alternative method of calculating GNP using the Income Approach is “RIPSAW.” 
 The mnemonic “RIPSAW” breaks down as follows: GDP = R + I + P + S + A + W 
 R = rents 
 I = interests 
 P = profits 
 SA = statistical adjustments (corporate income taxes, dividends, undistributed corporate profits 
 W = wages
LIMITATIONS OF NATIONAL INCOME 
ACCOUNTS 
 There are certain market transactions that give rise to payments and transfers of goods 
and services but are excluded from GNP accounting. 
 Those that do not arise to useful economic activities or ILLEGAL(drug traffic, 
prostitution, smuggling) 
 ƒGoods and services produced but do not appear in the market ( home activities by 
housewives) 
 Losses are not taken into account in the national income accounts (repair and 
rehabilitation)
Who determine GDP? 
 GDP Annual Growth Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of Statistics and 
Programme Implementation (MOSPI).
INDIAN 
GDP
31 
GDP TREND 
 The Indian economy is the 10th largest in the world. 
 Ranks 3rd pertaining to purchasing power parity (PPP) acc. to World 
Bank 
 The GDP of India in the year 2012 was US $1489. 
 Per capita income in India is $1516 at nominal and $3,652 at PPP. 
 On a per-capita-income basis, India ranked 141st by nominal GDP 
 3rd by GDP (PPP) in 2012, according to the IMF. 
 India is a member of BRICS.
GDP TREND 
 India is the 19th-largest exporter and the 10th-largest importer in the world. 
 India's GDP grew by 9.3% in 2010–11; thus, the growth rate has nearly halved in 
just three years. 
 GDP growth rose marginally to 4.8% during the quarter through March 2013, from 
about 4.7% in the previous quarter. 
 From 1951 until 2013, India GDP Annual Growth Rate averaged 5.8 Percent 
reaching an all time high of 10.2 Percent in December of 1988 and a record low of 
-5.2 Percent in December of 1979.
Indian Economy 
 GDP value of India represents 2.98 percent of the world economy. 
 Studies have shown that over the past 20 years, annual GDP 
growth over 2.5% has caused a 0.5% drop in unemployment for 
every percentage point over 2.5%. 
 GDP in India is reported by the The World Bank Group. Historically, from 
1960 until 2011, India’s GDP averaged 368.8 USD Billion reaching an all 
time high of 1848.0 USD Billion in December of 2011 and a record low of 
36.6 USD Billion in December of 1960.
GDP per capita PPP 
 GDP per capita in India was last recorded at 3649.53 US dollars in 2011, 
when adjusted by purchasing power parity (PPP). The GDP per Capita, in 
India, when adjusted by Purchasing Power Parity is equivalent to 17 
percent of the world's average. 
 Historically, from 1980 until 2011, India’s GDP per capita PPP averaged 
1446.4 USD reaching an all time high of 3649.5 USD in December of 2011 
and a record low of 419.9 USD in December of 1980. The GDP per capita 
PPP is obtained by dividing the country’s gross domestic product, adjusted 
by purchasing power parity, by the total population.
GDP per capita PPP
GDP Annual Growth Rate 
 Historically, from 1951 until 2012, India’s GDP Annual Growth Rate 
averaged 5.9 Percent reaching an all time high of 10.2 Percent in December 
of 1988 and a record low of -5.2 Percent in December of 1979. Simply, the 
GDP value excludes indirect taxes (VAT) paid to the government and 
includes the original value of products without accounting for government 
subsidies. GDP Annual Growth Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of 
Statistics and Programme Implementation.
INDIA GDP GROWTH RATE
Inflation Rate 
 The inflation rate in India was recorded at 7.18 percent in December of 
2012. 
 Inflation Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of Statistics and 
Programme Implementation. Historically, from 1969 until 2012, India Inflation 
Rate averaged 7.75 Percent reaching an all time high of 34.68 Percent in 
September of 1974 and a record low of -11.31 Percent in May of 1976.
Inflation Rate
GDP(nominal)
IMF GDP Forecast (2011-2018)
GDP 2013-14 
For 2013-14, the CSO has projected a growth rate of 4.6 per cent in agriculture and 
allied sectors, up from 1.4 per cent a year earlier. 
Manufacturing, however, is expected to register a contraction of 0.2 per cent in this 
financial year compared with growth of 1.1 per cent in the previous year. 
the services sector, including finance, insurance, real estate and business services 
sectors, is likely to grow 11.2 per cent this year compared with 10.9 per cent in 2012- 
13.
GDP 2014-15 
 Ratings agency Crisil said on Wednesday that India will witness a GDP growth 
rate of 6 per cent for the fiscal 2014-15, up from an estimated 4.8 per cent in the 
current fiscal. This will be aided by an expected continuation of the reform 
process, the implementation of stalled projects, debottlenecking of the mining 
sector and a recovery in industry on higher external demand, it said.
PREDICTIONS 
 Goldman Sachs predicted that 
"from 2007 to 2020, India's GDP per capita in US$ terms will quadruple", and that the 
Indian economy will surpass the United States (in US$) by 2043. 
In spite of the high growth rate, the report stated that India would continue to remain 
a low-income country for decades to come 
could be a "motor for the world economy" if it fulfills its growth potential. World growth 
has since slowed substantially.
IS GDP 
CORREC 
T INDEX?
Limitations of GDP 
 Non-market transactions 
 GDP excludes activities that are not provided through the market, such as household 
production and volunteer or unpaid services. 
 As a result, GDP is understated. Unpaid work conducted on Free and Open Source 
Software (such as Linux) contribute nothing to GDP, but it was estimated that it would 
have cost more than a billion US dollars for a commercial company to develop 
 Sustainability of growth 
 GDP does not measure the sustainability of growth.
Limitations of GDP 
 Underground economy 
 Official GDP does not take into account the underground economy, 
 That is transactions contributing to production, such as illegal trade and tax-avoiding 
activities, are unreported, causing GDP to be underestimated. 
 Quality of goods 
GDP sees the total production’s amount. It does not look into the quality of product.
Limitations 
 GDP is not always reflective of increases in social welfare 
Example: 
a. Decrease in crime rate – not considered 
as increase in output and is not reflected in GDP 
b. Increase in leisure – may be associated with decrease in GDP 
(less time is spent on producing output)
Limitations 
 GDP does not measure the effects of redistributive policies 
It does not distinguish between in which most output goes to a few people and the case in which 
output is evenly divided among all people. 
 GDP is also neutral about the kinds of goods an economy produces 
 People may buy cheap, low-durability goods over and over again, or they may buy high-durability 
goods less often. 
 It is possible that the monetary value of the items sold in the first case is higher than that in the 
second case, in which case a higher GDP is simply the result of greater inefficiency and waste
 GDP seldom reflects losses or social ills. 
GDP accounting rules DO NOT ADJUST for production that POLLUTES the 
environment. 
Thus: 
THE MORE PRODUCTION there is, the LARGER the GDP, regardless of how 
much pollution results in the process.
Alternatives to GDP 
 Human development index (HDI) 
up until 2009 report HDI used GDP as a part of its calculation and then factors in 
indicators of life expectancy and education levels. In 2010 the GDP component has been 
replaced with GNI. 
 Genuine progress indicator (GPI) or Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) – 
The GPI and the ISEW attempt to address many of the above criticisms by taking the same 
raw information supplied for GDP and then adjust for income distribution, add for the value of 
household and volunteer work, and subtract for crime and pollution.
Other Indexes 
 Gross national happiness (GNH) 
 Happy Planet Index – 
 OECD Better Life Index 
 Composite Wealth Indicators 
 Future Orientation Index 
 World Governance Index 
 Social Progress Index
Thank you 
ANY QUESTIONS

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GDP trends in Indian Economy

  • 1. GDP Trends in Indian Economy
  • 2. What is Economy?  Production, distribution or trade, and consumption of limited goods and services by different agents in a given geographical location  Can be divided into various sectors:-  Primary  Secondary  Tertiary  Quaternary  Quinary  The Indian economy is the 10th largest in the world by nominal GDP
  • 3. ECONOMY: SECTORS  Most important and the fastest growing sector of Indian economy are services. Trade, hotels, transport and communication; financing, insurance, real estate and business services and community, social and personal services account for more than 60 percent of GDP  Agriculture, forestry and fishing constitute around 12 percent of the output, but employs more than 50 percent of the labour force  Manufacturing accounts for 15 percent of GDP, construction for another 8 percent and mining, quarrying, electricity, gas and water supply for the remaining 5 percent
  • 4. What is National income?  Final outcome of all economic activities of a nation valued in terms of money  Determinant of the business level and economic status of a country  It has three different measures :-  GDP  GNP  NNP
  • 5. GDP  Equal to the total expenditures for all final goods and services produced within the country in a fixed period of time (usually a 365-day year) known as fiscal year  Equal to the sum of the value added at every stage of production (the intermediate stages) by all the industries within a country, plus taxes minus the subsidies on products, in the period  Equal to the sum of the income generated by production in the country in the period—that is, compensation of employees, taxes on production and imports minus the subsidies
  • 6. GDP adjusting by PPP  Ranks 3rd pertaining to purchasing power parity (PPP) acc. to World Bank  Using a PPP basis is more useful when comparing generalized differences in living standards on the whole because, PPP takes into account the relative cost of living and the inflation rates of the countries, rather than using just exchange rates which may distort the real differences in income  The GDP in India expanded 0.60 percent in the third quarter of 2012 over the previous quarter  GDP Growth Rate in India is reported by the OECD(Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development)
  • 7. GNP and NNP  GNP: The value of all final goods and services produced during a specific period, usually one year, plus incomes earned abroad by he nationals minus incomes earned locally by foreigners  NNP: The measure of net output available for consumption by the society including consumers, producers and government NNP= GNP – depreciation
  • 8. Difference between GDP, GNP, NNP  Net foreign income : factor payments received from the foreign sector by domestic citizens and factor payments made to foreign citizens for domestic production  “Gross” word indicates no allowance for depreciation
  • 9. Example:  Assume that in 2013, a country called A produced only one piece of calculator priced at $10.00. To produce this calculator, country A used $5.00 worth of factors of production owned by citizens of country A and $5.00 worth of factors of production owned by citizens of country B. Country B produced one loaf of bread priced at $3.00. And to produce this loaf of bread, country B uses $2.00 worth of factors of produced owned by citizens of Country B and $1.00 worth of factors of production owned by Country A.
  • 10.  The GDP of country A was $10.00. Because it produced in its own country a good worth $10.00. It does not really matter who owned the factors of production in producing the calculator.  But what was its GNP? Country A GNP was $6.00. Country A citizens contributed $5.00 worth of factors of production to produce the calculator AND $1.00 worth of factors to produce the bread in Country B.  Similarly the GDP and GNP of country B was $3.00 and $7.00 respectively.
  • 11.  NNP:- Assume that to produce the calculator, country A used a machine worth $5.00 and the depreciation rate of that machine in 2013 was $1.00. Since its GNP was $6.00 and depreciation was $1.00, the NNP for country A was $5.00.
  • 12. CIRCULAR FLOW DIAGRAM  It is a visual model of the economy that shows how money flows through markets among households and firms.  Factors of production are the inputs to the production process. There are three basic factors of production: land, labor, capital.  Factor market is the market where factors of production are bought and sold such as market for labor, capital, resources, machinery etc.  Product market - trades final goods which were produced by means of factors of production (from factor market).
  • 13.  The primary activity of the economy is production or the process of creating a good or service that can be used to satisfy human wants.  AGGREGATES:-  Aggregate Demand is the total amount of goods and services demanded in the economy at a given overall price level and in a given time period.  ƒAggregate Supply is the total supply of goods and services produced within an economy at a given overall price level in a given time period.
  • 14. MEASURING GDP  ƒMonetary Measure. GDP is the monetary value of the total output of goods and services produced by an economy within a given period of time (quarterly or annual).  ƒNo Double or Multiple Counting. GDP includes only the market value of FINAL GOODS (goods and services that are purchased for final use by consumer, not for resale, or further processing) and ignores INTERMEDIATE GOODS (goods and services that are purchased for resale or for further processing) altogether.
  • 15. MEASURING GDP  I buy your second-hand bike for 15,000 Rupees, should we including it in the Expenditure (C) ? Nope. Because the bike Is not ‘produced again.  Now, I buy your second-hand bike from an auto dealer, (who gets Rs.1000 Commission) should we include it in the (C)? Hell Yes, because he sold his ‘service’ to me uniquely. Every time he sells a second hand product, although no new ‘product’ is created but new service is delivered by him.
  • 16. WHAT IF SAME 1000 RUPEE NOTE IS CHANGING HANDS?  I gave a note of Rs.1000 to that dealer as part of his brokerage and he gives the same Rs.1000 note to the electricity company for his monthly bill .Same Rs.1000 note is changing hands so is our GDP =Rs.1000? Nope. GDP is the money value of everything produced within India. So brokerage service is Rs.1000 separately and the electricity produced is also worth Rs.1000 separately. Therefore, Even as same 1000 rupee note is given to both parties. Total GDP=1000 brokerage+1000 electricity bill=Rs.2000 If electri.co gives that 1000 rupee note to its peon as salary, then again it has to be counted. Because peon sold his unique service separately to the company. So in that case Total GDP =‘Brokerage+Electric bill+peon’ salary=Rs.3000
  • 17. ƒExclusion of Output Produced Abroad by Domestically Owned Factors of Production.  GDP is the value of output produced by factors of production located within a country.
  • 18. APPROACHESTO MEASURING THE ECONOMY  There are three (3) approaches to measuring GDP/GNP:  ƒBy Expenditure  By Production  By Income  TOTALPRODUCTION =TOTALINCOME=TOTAL EXPENDITURE
  • 19. EXPENDITURE APPROACH  is a method of computing GDP/GNP that measures the amount spent on all final goods during a given period.  Thus: Y = C + I + G + (X-M)
  • 20. PERSONAL CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE (C)  is spending by households on current needs. These are expenditures on food, beverages, tobacco, clothing and footwear, fuel, light, and water, household furnishings, household operations, transportation/communications, and miscellaneous expenses.
  • 21. Three (3) main categories:  Durable goods are goods that last a relatively long time (automobiles, furniture, and household appliances)  Non durable goods are goods consumed immediately or for a short time (food, clothing, gasoline, and cigarette)  Payment for services are things that people buy that do not involve the production of physical items (services of doctors, lawyers, and educational institutions
  • 22. INVESTMENT (I)  is the total investment in capital such as the purchase of new housing, plants, equipment, and inventory by the private (or non government) sector.
  • 23. GOVERNMENT SPENDING  is expenditures by the government for final goods and services. These are spending on weapons, salaries and wages of public school teachers, police, and other public servants.
  • 24. NET EXPORTS (X-M)  is the difference between the exports (X) and imports (M). Either positive (X>M) or negative(M>X). Money we get from export is added. You remember that GDP means Money value of everything we produce within India. So if we import something, it has to be subtracted, because it is not produced within India. So formula (for ease In remembering) GDP = Consumer+Investor+Governernment + (eXporter – iMporter)
  • 25. PRODUCTION ORVALUE-ADDED APPROACH  is a method of computing GDP/GNP that measures the economy based on the contribution of industries and sectors to the value of the final goods.  It requires three stages of analysis:  Gross value of output from all sectors is estimated.  Intermediate consumption such as cost of materials, supplies and services used in production final output is derived.  Then gross output is reduced by intermediate consumption to develop net production.  Gross Value Added = Gross Value of output – Value of Intermediate Consumption.  Value of Output = Value of the total sales of goods and services + Value of changes in the inventories.
  • 26. EXAMPLE  Total money value of everything produced (value added at each stage)  Farmer produced Wheat and sold 100 kg of it @ 2000 Rs. (Original value)  Flour mill, purchased it, grinded it and sold the flour to baker @ 2500 Rs. (+500 value added to previous purchase)  Baker made breads, cookies and biscuits and sold the total production @3500 Rs to its final customers. (+1000 value added to previous purchase)  what is total ‘GDP’ here? 2000+2500+3500=8000 Rs? Hell no! You’ve to see the value added. So, total money value of this line is: 2000+500+1000=3500. Not all of the wheat goes into Baker’s oven. Some of it will go in making beer, some in a normal household for making roti and so on. You’ve to track the value added in each different line.
  • 27. INCOME APPROACH  Sum total of incomes of individuals living in a country during 1 year .  Another way of measuring GDP is to measure total income. If GDP is calculated this way it is sometimes called Gross Domestic Income (GDI), or GDP(I).  An alternative method of calculating GNP using the Income Approach is “RIPSAW.”  The mnemonic “RIPSAW” breaks down as follows: GDP = R + I + P + S + A + W  R = rents  I = interests  P = profits  SA = statistical adjustments (corporate income taxes, dividends, undistributed corporate profits  W = wages
  • 28. LIMITATIONS OF NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTS  There are certain market transactions that give rise to payments and transfers of goods and services but are excluded from GNP accounting.  Those that do not arise to useful economic activities or ILLEGAL(drug traffic, prostitution, smuggling)  ƒGoods and services produced but do not appear in the market ( home activities by housewives)  Losses are not taken into account in the national income accounts (repair and rehabilitation)
  • 29. Who determine GDP?  GDP Annual Growth Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MOSPI).
  • 31. 31 GDP TREND  The Indian economy is the 10th largest in the world.  Ranks 3rd pertaining to purchasing power parity (PPP) acc. to World Bank  The GDP of India in the year 2012 was US $1489.  Per capita income in India is $1516 at nominal and $3,652 at PPP.  On a per-capita-income basis, India ranked 141st by nominal GDP  3rd by GDP (PPP) in 2012, according to the IMF.  India is a member of BRICS.
  • 32. GDP TREND  India is the 19th-largest exporter and the 10th-largest importer in the world.  India's GDP grew by 9.3% in 2010–11; thus, the growth rate has nearly halved in just three years.  GDP growth rose marginally to 4.8% during the quarter through March 2013, from about 4.7% in the previous quarter.  From 1951 until 2013, India GDP Annual Growth Rate averaged 5.8 Percent reaching an all time high of 10.2 Percent in December of 1988 and a record low of -5.2 Percent in December of 1979.
  • 33. Indian Economy  GDP value of India represents 2.98 percent of the world economy.  Studies have shown that over the past 20 years, annual GDP growth over 2.5% has caused a 0.5% drop in unemployment for every percentage point over 2.5%.  GDP in India is reported by the The World Bank Group. Historically, from 1960 until 2011, India’s GDP averaged 368.8 USD Billion reaching an all time high of 1848.0 USD Billion in December of 2011 and a record low of 36.6 USD Billion in December of 1960.
  • 34. GDP per capita PPP  GDP per capita in India was last recorded at 3649.53 US dollars in 2011, when adjusted by purchasing power parity (PPP). The GDP per Capita, in India, when adjusted by Purchasing Power Parity is equivalent to 17 percent of the world's average.  Historically, from 1980 until 2011, India’s GDP per capita PPP averaged 1446.4 USD reaching an all time high of 3649.5 USD in December of 2011 and a record low of 419.9 USD in December of 1980. The GDP per capita PPP is obtained by dividing the country’s gross domestic product, adjusted by purchasing power parity, by the total population.
  • 36. GDP Annual Growth Rate  Historically, from 1951 until 2012, India’s GDP Annual Growth Rate averaged 5.9 Percent reaching an all time high of 10.2 Percent in December of 1988 and a record low of -5.2 Percent in December of 1979. Simply, the GDP value excludes indirect taxes (VAT) paid to the government and includes the original value of products without accounting for government subsidies. GDP Annual Growth Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation.
  • 38. Inflation Rate  The inflation rate in India was recorded at 7.18 percent in December of 2012.  Inflation Rate in India is reported by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation. Historically, from 1969 until 2012, India Inflation Rate averaged 7.75 Percent reaching an all time high of 34.68 Percent in September of 1974 and a record low of -11.31 Percent in May of 1976.
  • 41. IMF GDP Forecast (2011-2018)
  • 42.
  • 43. GDP 2013-14 For 2013-14, the CSO has projected a growth rate of 4.6 per cent in agriculture and allied sectors, up from 1.4 per cent a year earlier. Manufacturing, however, is expected to register a contraction of 0.2 per cent in this financial year compared with growth of 1.1 per cent in the previous year. the services sector, including finance, insurance, real estate and business services sectors, is likely to grow 11.2 per cent this year compared with 10.9 per cent in 2012- 13.
  • 44. GDP 2014-15  Ratings agency Crisil said on Wednesday that India will witness a GDP growth rate of 6 per cent for the fiscal 2014-15, up from an estimated 4.8 per cent in the current fiscal. This will be aided by an expected continuation of the reform process, the implementation of stalled projects, debottlenecking of the mining sector and a recovery in industry on higher external demand, it said.
  • 45. PREDICTIONS  Goldman Sachs predicted that "from 2007 to 2020, India's GDP per capita in US$ terms will quadruple", and that the Indian economy will surpass the United States (in US$) by 2043. In spite of the high growth rate, the report stated that India would continue to remain a low-income country for decades to come could be a "motor for the world economy" if it fulfills its growth potential. World growth has since slowed substantially.
  • 46. IS GDP CORREC T INDEX?
  • 47. Limitations of GDP  Non-market transactions  GDP excludes activities that are not provided through the market, such as household production and volunteer or unpaid services.  As a result, GDP is understated. Unpaid work conducted on Free and Open Source Software (such as Linux) contribute nothing to GDP, but it was estimated that it would have cost more than a billion US dollars for a commercial company to develop  Sustainability of growth  GDP does not measure the sustainability of growth.
  • 48. Limitations of GDP  Underground economy  Official GDP does not take into account the underground economy,  That is transactions contributing to production, such as illegal trade and tax-avoiding activities, are unreported, causing GDP to be underestimated.  Quality of goods GDP sees the total production’s amount. It does not look into the quality of product.
  • 49. Limitations  GDP is not always reflective of increases in social welfare Example: a. Decrease in crime rate – not considered as increase in output and is not reflected in GDP b. Increase in leisure – may be associated with decrease in GDP (less time is spent on producing output)
  • 50. Limitations  GDP does not measure the effects of redistributive policies It does not distinguish between in which most output goes to a few people and the case in which output is evenly divided among all people.  GDP is also neutral about the kinds of goods an economy produces  People may buy cheap, low-durability goods over and over again, or they may buy high-durability goods less often.  It is possible that the monetary value of the items sold in the first case is higher than that in the second case, in which case a higher GDP is simply the result of greater inefficiency and waste
  • 51.  GDP seldom reflects losses or social ills. GDP accounting rules DO NOT ADJUST for production that POLLUTES the environment. Thus: THE MORE PRODUCTION there is, the LARGER the GDP, regardless of how much pollution results in the process.
  • 52. Alternatives to GDP  Human development index (HDI) up until 2009 report HDI used GDP as a part of its calculation and then factors in indicators of life expectancy and education levels. In 2010 the GDP component has been replaced with GNI.  Genuine progress indicator (GPI) or Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW) – The GPI and the ISEW attempt to address many of the above criticisms by taking the same raw information supplied for GDP and then adjust for income distribution, add for the value of household and volunteer work, and subtract for crime and pollution.
  • 53. Other Indexes  Gross national happiness (GNH)  Happy Planet Index –  OECD Better Life Index  Composite Wealth Indicators  Future Orientation Index  World Governance Index  Social Progress Index
  • 54. Thank you ANY QUESTIONS