what is GDP
Government Reliance
GDP's Impact on Policy
GDP's Strengths
GDP’s Limits
100

What is GDP

The total monetary value of all goods and services produced within a country’s borders in a specific time period.

100

Governments track GDP to measure this overall condition of the economy.

national economic performance

100

GDP growth shapes these kinds of decisions about where public money should go.

government spending decisions

100

GDP is valued for being this, making it easy to measure and use.

standardized / straightforward

100

GDP says nothing about how this is distributed among people.

Income

200

The "P" in GDP stands for what

Product

200

GDP helps guide these two types of policy.

fiscal and monetary policies

200

If GDP slows down, governments often increase spending to boost this

Economic demand 

200

GDP makes comparisons easy across these two dimensions.

time and countries

200

GDP ignores this type of unpaid work, such as caregiving.

household labor / caregiving

300

GDP only measures this type of activity, leaving unpaid labor out.

Market activity 

300

When GDP slows, governments often spend on things like highways or schools to do this.

create jobs / stimulate demand?

300

If GDP grows too fast, central banks raise interest rates to prevent this.

Inflation

300

GDP correlates with access to this, examples include water, energy, and transportation.

infrastructure

300

Name one measure of quality of life that GDP does not capture.

health / happiness / education

400

Despite being widely used, GDP was never designed to be a measure of this broader concept.

Well-being

400

When GDP grows too quickly, central banks may raise this to fight inflation.

interest rates

400

GDP-focused policies sometimes ignore this long-term priority.

sustainability 

400

Higher GDP is often linked to improvements in these services, such as schools and hospitals.

Public Services

400

GDP does not measure whether growth harms this.

The enviroment

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