📌 Snapshot
- The conceptual scaffolding of macroeconomics: final vs intermediate goods, consumption vs capital goods, stocks vs flows, gross vs net investment, depreciation.
- The circular flow of income runs between households and firms; the three methods of measuring national income (product/value-added, expenditure, income) all give the same GDP.
- The family of national income aggregates — GDP, GNP, NDP, NNP, NI, PI, PDI — links to the price-cost distinctions (market price, factor cost, basic prices).
- Nominal GDP uses current prices, real GDP uses base-year prices; three price indices track inflation — GDP deflator, CPI, WPI.
- GDP is a flawed welfare indicator because it ignores distribution, non-monetary exchanges and externalities — a high-frequency CUET source.
📖 Detailed Notes
2.1 Core concepts
- Source of economic wealth: a country's wealth depends not on mere possession of natural resources but on how those resources are used in the production process to generate a flow of output, income and wealth (NCERT §2.1, p. 9).
- Final goods: goods that are meant for final use and will not pass through any further stage of production or transformation; once sold, they pass out of the active economic flow (NCERT §2.1, p. 10). It is not the nature of the good but the economic nature of its use that makes it final — tea leaves used at home are final, but in a restaurant they are intermediate (NCERT §2.1, p. 10).
- Consumption goods vs capital goods: consumption (consumer) goods are food, clothing, recreation services — consumed when purchased; capital goods are durable tools, implements and machines used in production but not themselves transformed in the production process (NCERT §2.1, pp. 10–11).
- Consumer durables (TVs, automobiles, computers) share durability with capital goods but are for ultimate consumption (NCERT §2.1, p. 11).
- Intermediate goods: goods used by other producers as raw material/inputs — e.g., steel sheets for cars, copper for utensils. Counting them would lead to double counting because their value is already embedded in the final good (NCERT §2.1, p. 11).
- Money as the common measuring rod: monetary value is the only common measure to add diverse outputs like cloth (metres), rice (tonnes) and machines (NCERT §2.1, p. 11).
- Stocks vs flows: flows are defined over a period of time (income, output, profit); stocks are defined at a point of time (capital stock, inventory). The tank-and-tap analogy — water flowing in per minute is a flow, water in the tank at a moment is a stock (NCERT §2.1, pp. 11–12).
- Gross investment, depreciation, net investment: gross investment is total capital-goods output; depreciation is the annual allowance for wear and tear of a capital good (cost ÷ useful life); Net Investment = Gross Investment − Depreciation (NCERT §2.1, pp. 12–13).
- Four factors of production and remunerations: labour → wages, capital → interest, entrepreneurship → profit, land/fixed natural resources → rent (NCERT §2.2, p. 14).
- Circular flow of income: in a simple economy with no government, no external trade and no savings, factor payments by firms equal household consumption expenditure on goods/services produced by the firms — income moves in a circle through households and firms (NCERT §2.2, pp. 14–15, Fig. 2.1).
- Three methods of estimating GDP (measured at points A, B, C of the circular flow diagram): expenditure method (uppermost flow A), product method (B), income method (C) — all three must give the same value of GDP (NCERT §2.2, p. 16).
- Macroeconomic model: a simplified story that highlights essential features of an economic system; not a complete description of reality (NCERT §2.2, p. 16).
- Product / Value-Added Method: Value added of a firm = Value of production of the firm − Value of intermediate goods used. Wheat–baker example: farmer adds Rs 100, baker adds Rs 200 − Rs 50 = Rs 150, total value added = Rs 250 (not Rs 300, which would be double counting) (NCERT §2.2.1, p. 17, Table 2.1).
- Gross Value Added vs Net Value Added: GVA includes depreciation; NVA = GVA − Depreciation (NCERT §2.2.1, p. 18).
- Inventory: stock of unsold finished goods, semi-finished goods or raw materials carried from one year to the next — a stock variable; change in inventory is a flow. Change in inventory ≡ production − sale during the year (NCERT §2.2.1, pp. 18–19).
- Three categories of investment: (i) rise in inventory of a firm over a year; (ii) fixed business investment (addition to machinery, factory buildings, equipment); (iii) residential investment (addition of housing) (NCERT §2.2.1, p. 19).
- Planned vs unplanned change in inventories: unexpected fall in sales → unplanned accumulation; unexpected rise in sales → unplanned decumulation. Shirt-firm example illustrates both (NCERT §2.2.1, pp. 19–20).
- Expenditure Method: GDP ≡ C + I + G + X − M, where C is final consumption expenditure on domestic goods, I is investment, G is government final expenditure, X is exports, M is imports. Investment expenditure I is the most unstable of these components (NCERT §2.2.2, pp. 21–22, eq. 2.4).
- Income Method: GDP ≡ W + P + In + R — wages, profits, interest, rents summed across all M households (NCERT §2.2.3, p. 22, eq. 2.5).
- Identity tying all three methods: GDP ≡ Σ GVAᵢ ≡ C + I + G + X − M ≡ W + P + In + R (NCERT §2.2.3, p. 23, eq. 2.6). The two-firm example (A produces Rs 50 of cotton, B produces Rs 200 of cloth) gives GDP = Rs 200 by all three methods (NCERT §2.2.3, p. 23, Tables 2.2–2.3).
- Factor cost, basic prices, market prices: Factor cost includes only payments to factors (no tax). Basic prices = Factor cost + Net production taxes. Market prices = Basic prices + Net product taxes. Net production taxes = production taxes − production subsidies (land revenue, stamp/registration fees — independent of volume). Net product taxes = product taxes − product subsidies (excise, service tax, customs — per unit/product). CSO's January 2015 revision replaced GDP at factor cost with GVA at basic prices as the headline measure (NCERT §2.2.4, pp. 24–25).
- GNP and GDP: GNP ≡ GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA) (NCERT §2.3, p. 25).
- NNP at market prices ≡ GNP − Depreciation (NCERT §2.3, p. 25).
- National Income (NNP at factor cost) ≡ NNP at market prices − Net Indirect Taxes, where Net Indirect Taxes = Indirect Taxes − Subsidies (NCERT §2.3, pp. 25–26).
- Personal Income (PI) ≡ NI − Undistributed Profits − Net interest payments by households − Corporate Tax + Transfer payments to households from government and firms (NCERT §2.3, p. 26).
- Personal Disposable Income (PDI) ≡ PI − Personal tax payments − Non-tax payments (NCERT §2.3, p. 26).
- National Disposable Income = NNP at market prices + Other current transfers from the rest of the world; Private Income = Factor income from NDP accruing to private sector + National debt interest + NFIA + Current transfers from government + Other net transfers from the rest of the world (NCERT §2.3, pp. 26–27, box).
- Nominal vs Real GDP: Nominal GDP uses current prices; Real GDP uses constant (base-year) prices, so any change reflects volume change only. Bread example: 100 units × Rs 10 in 2000 = Rs 1,000; 110 × Rs 15 in 2001 = nominal Rs 1,650; real (at 2000 prices) = 110 × Rs 10 = Rs 1,100 (NCERT §2.4, p. 29).
- GDP Deflator = Nominal GDP / Real GDP (also expressed as a percentage). In the bread example, deflator = 1,650 / 1,100 = 1.50 (i.e., 150%) — prices have risen 1.5×. There is also a GNP deflator (NCERT §2.4, pp. 29–30).
- Consumer Price Index (CPI): price index of a representative consumer's basket, expressed as current-year cost ÷ base-year cost × 100. Rice–cloth example: base-year cost Rs 1,400 → current-year cost Rs 1,950 → CPI ≈ 139.29 (NCERT §2.4, pp. 30–31).
- Wholesale Price Index (WPI): index of wholesale prices (bulk-traded goods like raw materials/semi-finished goods); in the USA this is called Producer Price Index (PPI) (NCERT §2.4, p. 30).
- CPI vs GDP deflator differs because: (1) CPI covers only goods consumed, not all goods produced; (2) CPI includes imported goods, GDP deflator does not; (3) CPI uses constant weights, GDP deflator uses production-level weights (NCERT §2.4, p. 30).
- GDP and welfare — three reasons GDP is not a good welfare index: (1) Distribution of GDP may be unequal — rise in GDP concentrated in a few hands (90-person example: GDP rises Rs 1,000 → Rs 1,010, but 90% of people are worse off); (2) Non-monetary exchanges like domestic work by women and barter exchanges are not counted → GDP underestimates activity; (3) Externalities — beneficial/harmful effects not paid or penalised; e.g., oil refinery polluting a river hurts fishermen, but the harm is not deducted → GDP overestimates welfare in case of negative externalities and underestimates it in case of positive externalities (NCERT §2.5, pp. 30–31).
2.2 Definitions to memorise
| Term | Definition | Page |
|---|---|---|
| Final good | Good meant for final use that will not undergo further transformation in production | 10 |
| Capital good | Durable final good used in production that does not get transformed in the production process | 10–11 |
| Consumer durable | Final good for ultimate consumption that is durable like a capital good (TV, car, computer) | 11 |
| Intermediate good | Good used by other producers as raw material or input; not a final good | 11 |
| Stock | Variable defined at a point of time (capital, inventory) | 11–12 |
| Flow | Variable defined over a period of time (income, output, profit, change in stock) | 11–12 |
| Gross investment | That part of final output that comprises capital goods produced in a year | 12 |
| Depreciation | Annual allowance for wear and tear of a capital good = original cost ÷ useful life | 12–13 |
| Net investment | Gross investment − Depreciation | 13 |
| Value added | Value of production of a firm − Value of intermediate goods used | 17 |
| GVA | Gross Value Added (includes depreciation) | 18 |
| NVA | Net Value Added = GVA − Depreciation | 18 |
| Inventory | Stock of unsold finished, semi-finished goods or raw materials carried over | 18 |
| GDP | Sum total of gross value added of all firms in the domestic economy = C + I + G + X − M = W + P + In + R | 20, 22, 23 |
| GNP | GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad | 25 |
| NNP at market prices | GNP − Depreciation | 25 |
| National Income (NNP at factor cost) | NNP at market prices − (Indirect taxes − Subsidies) | 25–26 |
| Personal Income (PI) | NI − Undistributed Profits − Net interest payments by households − Corporate Tax + Transfer payments | 26 |
| Personal Disposable Income (PDI) | PI − Personal tax payments − Non-tax payments | 26 |
| Net Indirect Taxes | Indirect Taxes − Subsidies | 25 |
| Factor cost | Payment to factors of production, excluding any tax | 24 |
| Basic prices | Factor cost + Net production taxes | 24–25 |
| Market prices | Basic prices + Net product taxes | 24–25 |
| Nominal GDP | GDP at current prevailing prices | 29 |
| Real GDP | GDP at constant (base-year) prices | 29 |
| GDP Deflator | Nominal GDP ÷ Real GDP | 29 |
| CPI | Index of base-year-basket cost: (current-year cost ÷ base-year cost) × 100 | 30 |
| WPI | Wholesale Price Index (Producer Price Index in USA) | 30 |
| Externality | Benefit (or harm) one party imposes on another for which no payment/penalty exists | 31 |
2.3 Diagrams / processes to remember
- Fig. 2.1 Circular flow of income (p. 15): two-sector model with two markets — goods and services market (top arrows) and factor market (bottom arrows). Points A (expenditure method), B (product method) and C (income method) are the three measurement points; all three flows are equal.
- Table 2.1 Wheat–Baker value added (p. 17): farmer produces Rs 100 (no intermediate goods, value added Rs 100); baker produces Rs 200 with Rs 50 of intermediate wheat (value added Rs 150); total VA = Rs 250.
- Fig. 2.2 GDP by three methods (p. 23): pictorial identity GDP ≡ Σ GVAᵢ ≡ C + I + G + X − M ≡ W + P + In + R.
- Tables 2.2 & 2.3 Firms A & B example (p. 23): GDP = Rs 200 by all three methods.
- Fig. 2.3 Sub-categories of aggregate income (p. 26): step-down ladder from GDP → GNP (+ NFIA) → NNP at market price (− D) → NI / NNP at FC (− ID + Sub) → PI (− UP − NIH − CT + TrH) → PDI (− PTP − NP).
- Table 2.4 Basic National Income Aggregates (pp. 27–28): GDPMP, GDPFC, NDPMP, NDPFC, GNPMP, GNPFC, NNPMP, NNPFC/NI, GVA at MP/basic/factor cost — formulas for each.
2.4 Common confusions / NTA trap points
- "Investment" in economics ≠ buying shares/property/insurance. Investment = capital formation (addition to capital stock) (NCERT §2.1, footnote 1, p. 12).
- Same good can be final or intermediate depending on use: tea leaves at home = final consumption; tea leaves in a restaurant = intermediate (NCERT §2.1, p. 10).
- GDP deflator vs CPI: CPI uses constant basket weights; GDP deflator weights vary with production. CPI includes imports; GDP deflator does not (NCERT §2.4, p. 30).
- GNP vs GDP direction of adjustment: GNP = GDP + NFIA (not minus). Foreigners' earnings inside India are deducted; Indians' earnings abroad are added.
- Factor cost vs market price: Market price = Factor cost + Net Indirect Taxes. CSO's January 2015 revision shifted the headline measure from GDP at factor cost to GDP at market prices and GVA at basic prices (NCERT §2.2.4, p. 24).
- Inventory is capital and a stock; change in inventory is investment and a flow. Both unplanned accumulation and decumulation get counted as investment (NCERT §2.2.1, p. 19).
🎯 Practice MCQs
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Q1. Which of the following is correctly defined as a "final good"?
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Answer: B
A final good, by definition, will not undergo further productive transformation. (A) describes an intermediate good; (C) merely describes durability; (D) describes replacement investment.
Q2. Tea leaves purchased by a household for home use are treated as a final good, but the same tea leaves purchased by a restaurant are treated as an intermediate good. This illustrates that:
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Answer: C
It is "not in the nature of the good but in the economic nature of its use that a good becomes a final good."
Q3. Net Investment in an economy is best defined as:
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Answer: B
Net investment is the new addition to the capital stock after deducting depreciation (wear and tear) from gross investment.
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Q4. Which one of the following is a stock variable?
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Answer: C
Stocks are defined at a particular point of time; capital stock on a given date is a stock. The other three options are flows defined over a period.
Q5. In the farmer–baker example, the farmer produces Rs 100 worth of wheat (no intermediate inputs) and the baker produces Rs 200 worth of bread using Rs 50 of wheat from the farmer. The aggregate value added (GDP) in this economy is:
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Answer: B
Farmer's VA = Rs 100; baker's VA = Rs 200 − Rs 50 = Rs 150; total = Rs 250. Adding Rs 200 + Rs 100 = Rs 300 would be double counting.
Q6. Identify the correct expenditure-method identity for GDP:
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Answer: B
Equation (2.4) is GDP ≡ C + I + G + X − M; imports M are subtracted because the consumption/investment/government terms include spending on imports, which is not domestic output.
Q7. the relationship between GVA at basic prices and GDP at market prices is:
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Answer: A
GVA at basic prices already includes net production taxes; to reach GDP at market prices we add net product taxes (product taxes − product subsidies).
Q8. Match the following aggregates with their defining relationships and choose the correct option: | Aggregate | Relationship | |---|---| | (i) GNP | (P) GNP − Depreciation | | (ii) NNP at market prices | (Q) NNP at market prices − Net Indirect Taxes | | (iii) National Income (NNP at factor cost) | (R) GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad | | (iv) Personal Disposable Income | (S) PI − Personal tax payments − Non-tax payments |
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Answer: B
GNP = GDP + NFIA; NNP(MP) = GNP − Depreciation; NI = NNP(MP) − Net Indirect Taxes; PDI = PI − Personal tax − Non-tax payments.
Q9. Suppose a country's GDP at market prices is Rs 1,100 crore, Net Factor Income from Abroad is Rs 100 crore, the value of (Indirect Taxes − Subsidies) is Rs 150 crore and National Income is Rs 850 crore. What is the value of depreciation?
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Answer: C
GNP = GDP + NFIA = 1,100 + 100 = 1,200. NNP(MP) = GNP − Depreciation. NI = NNP(MP) − Net Indirect Taxes ⇒ 850 = (1,200 − D) − 150 ⇒ D = 200 crore.
Q10. The nominal GNP of an economy is Rs 2,500 crore and the real GNP (at base-year prices) is Rs 3,000 crore. The GNP deflator (in percentage terms) is:
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Answer: B
Deflator = (Nominal / Real) × 100 = (2,500 / 3,000) × 100 ≈ 83.33%. Since the deflator is below 100, the price level has actually **fallen** below base-year levels — distractors at 120/150% try to lure students who divide the wrong way.
Q11. Which of the following is **not** a reason for why GDP may be a poor index of welfare?
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Answer: D
The three reasons are distribution, non-monetary exchanges and externalities. Nominal vs real GDP is a separate issue; constant-price calculation is not a welfare flaw.
Q12. Consider the following statements about price indices: 1. CPI uses constant basket weights, whereas GDP deflator uses weights that differ with production levels. 2. CPI includes prices of imported goods consumed by households, whereas the GDP deflator does not. 3. The Wholesale Price Index is known as the Producer Price Index (PPI) in the USA. Which of the statements is/are correct?
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Answer: D
All three statements are made explicitly — CPI uses constant weights, includes imports, and WPI corresponds to PPI in the USA.
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