#1 National Income
#1 National Income
#1 National Income
Factors of production:
◻ Basic components or inputs which are required in the production of goods and services
Land: Rent
◻ Gifts of nature, this includes everything on the land, under the land, above the land, or in the
sea (e.g., oil, water)
Labor: Wages
◻ The human component hired to assist in producing a good or service. Simply the number of
hours of work put in by a person
Capital: Interest
◻ Any man-made aid to production. It is physical plant, machinery, equipment and buildings; it
is not the money that you invest in the stock market
Entrepreneurship: Profit
◻ Combines the other factors and takes risks recognizing the possibility of gain from employing
these factors in a specific way. An entrepreneur is the one who sees an economic
opportunity and mixes land, labor and capital together to produce a product with economic
value.
3. Outline that the income flow is numerically equivalent
to the expenditure flow and the value of output flow.
GNI is the gross national Income which means the value of output produced
domestically and the value of output from external resources owned by the economy.
It is calculated by the following equation:
Net property Income from abroad means the difference between inflows and outflows
of income in the form of profits or remittances.
NNI is the net national Income which is GNI out of which replacement investment has
been deducted. This is done because the capital formation which is being done to
replace depreciated capital should not be accounted in the output of the current year.
So equation for NNI is as follows:
down.
◻ Trough - When the economy hits bottom, usually in a
recession.
◻ Expansion - When the economy starts growing again.
exuberance."
15. Explain, using a business cycle diagram, that economies typically
tend to go through a cyclical pattern characterized by the phases of the
business cycle.
To date, economists believe that there are five causes of the business cycle.
The fourth cause of the business cycle are the credit and loan
policies of commercial banking.
When "easy money" policies are in effect, interest rates are low
and loans are easy to get. They encourage the private sector to
borrow and invest, thus stimulating the economy.
Eventually the increased demand for loans causes the interest rates
to rise, which discourage new borrowers. As borrowing and
spending slow down, the level of economic activity declines.
The economy keeps declining until interest rates fall and the
business cycle begins over again.
15. Explain, using a business cycle diagram, that economies typically
tend to go through a cyclical pattern characterized by the phases of the
business cycle.