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GDP Calculator

GDP Calculator are finance calculator to find GDP given consumption, investment, government spending, export and imports

GDP Calculator are finance calculator to find GDP given consumption, investment, government spending, export and imports

GDP Calculator

by Nitrio
GDP Calculator
GDP Calculator
GDP Calculator

What is it about?

GDP Calculator are finance calculator to find GDP given consumption, investment, government spending, export and imports.

GDP Calculator

App Details

Version
1.1
Rating
NA
Size
8Mb
Genre
Utilities Productivity
Last updated
April 29, 2021
Release date
December 28, 2018
More info

App Screenshots

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App Store Description

GDP Calculator are finance calculator to find GDP given consumption, investment, government spending, export and imports.

The GDP (gross domestic product) can be calculated using either the expenditure approach or the resource cost-income approach

Features:
- Instant calculation
- Result are copy able to other app
- Formula are include as reference
- Support up to 16 decimal place
- Support various unit for each input

Gross domestic product is a monetary measure of the market value of all the final goods and services produced in a period of time, often annually or quarterly. Nominal GDP estimates are commonly used to determine the economic performance of a whole country or region, and to make international comparisons.

Economics GDP Equations Formulas
GDP = personal consumption + gross investment + government consumption + net exports of goods and services

GDP (Y) is the sum of consumption (C), investment (I), government spending (G) and net exports (X – M).

Y = C + I + G + (X − M)

Here is a description of each GDP component:
C - (consumption) is normally the largest GDP component in the economy, consisting of private expenditures in the economy (household final consumption expenditure). These personal expenditures fall under one of the following categories: durable goods, non durable goods, and services. Examples include food, rent, jewelry, gasoline, and medical expenses, but not the purchase of new housing.
I - (investment) includes, for instance, business investment in equipment, but does not include exchanges of existing assets. Examples include construction of a new mine, purchase of software, or purchase of machinery and equipment for a factory. Spending by households (not government) on new houses is also included in investment. In contrast to its colloquial meaning, "investment" in GDP does not mean purchases of financial products. Buying financial products is classed as 'saving', as opposed to investment. This avoids double-counting: if one buys shares in a company, and the company uses the money received to buy plant, equipment, etc., the amount will be counted toward GDP when the company spends the money on those things; to also count it when one gives it to the company would be to count two times an amount that only corresponds to one group of products. Buying bonds or stocks is a swapping of deeds, a transfer of claims on future production, not directly an expenditure on products.
G - (government spending) is the sum of government expenditures on final goods and services. It includes salaries of public servants, purchases of weapons for the military and any investment expenditure by a government. It does not include any transfer payments, such as social security or unemployment benefits.
X - (exports) represents gross exports. GDP captures the amount a country produces, including goods and services produced for other nations' consumption, therefore exports are added.
M - (imports) represents gross imports. Imports are subtracted since imported goods will be included in the terms G, I, or C, and must be deducted to avoid counting foreign supply as domestic.

*This is a universal app that work for both iPhone and iPad.

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