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| | Gross domestic product - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | A region's gross domestic product, or GDP, is one of several measures of the size of its economy. |  | | Buying financial products is classed as saving in macroeconomics, as opposed to investment (which, in the GDP formula is a form of spending). |  | | Another way of measuring GDP is to measure the total income payable in the GDP income accounts. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_domestic_product#Cross-border_comparison
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| | Encyclopedia: Gross state product |
 | | The South is the third largest contributor to the gross product of the United States at a total of $2,069,622 million. |  | | In economics, gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of the value of economic production of a particular territory in financial capital terms during a specificied period. |  | | It is the sum of all value added by industries within the state and serves as a counterpart to the gross domestic product, or GDP. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Gross-state-product
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| | Survey of Current Business: Regional data.(state income, gross state produc... @ HighBeam Research |
 | | Totals shown for the United States differ from the national income and product account estimates of gross domestic product (GDP) because GSP is derived from gross domestic income, which differs from GDP by the statistical discrepancy. |  | | The quarterly and annual estimates of state personal income and the estimates of gross state product are available on CD-ROM. |  | | Gross State Product (GSP) by Industry for States and Regions, 2001 [Millions of dollars] Agriculture, Rank of forestry, State and region total Total GSP and Mining GSP fishing United States... |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:105371911&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf
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| | gross national product |
 | | National income is equal to gross national product, minus an allowance for replacement of ageing capital stock. |  | | It is measured as the gross domestic product plus income earned by domestic residents from foreign investments, minus income earned during the same period by foreign investors in the country’s domestic market. |  | | GNP is usually assessed quarterly or yearly, and is defined as the total value of all goods and services produced by firms owned by the country concerned. |
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http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0004095.html
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| | sheet004.htm |
 | | BEA developed the methodology for the annual estimates of gross state product by component and by industry. |  | | GSP is the gross market value of the goods and services attributable to labor and property located in a state. |  | | For each industry, GSP is composed of four components: 1) compensation of employees, 2) proprietor’s income with inventory valuation adjustment and capital consumption allowances, 3) indirect business tax and nontax liability, and 4) others, mainly capital-related charges. |
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http://www.minnstats.state.mn.us/FINALTablesForMinnStats_Set3_files/sheet004.htm
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| | Measures of national income and output - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Gross National Product (GNP) is the total value of final goods and services produced in a year by a country's nationals (including profits from capital held abroad). |  | | Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total value of final goods and services produced within a country's borders in a year. |  | | GDP - taxes on products + subsidies on products = GVA |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measures_of_national_income_and_output
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| | Gross State Product by Industry 1977-2001 |
 | | In practice, GSP estimates are measured as the sum of distributions by industry of the components of gross domestic income - - that is, the sum of the costs incurred and incomes earned in the production of GDP. |  | | GSP for a State is derived as the sum of gross state product originating in all industries in the State. |  | | State estimates of GSP for all industries and components are "controlled" to national totals of gross product originating (GPO) for all industries and components. |
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http://census.state.nc.us/economics/gsp.html
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| | Gross domestic product - Encyclopedia.WorldSearch |
 | | In economics, the gross domestic product (GDP) is a measure of the amount of the economic production of a particular territory in financial capital terms during a specific time period. |  | | GDP differs from gross national product in excluding inter-country income transfers, in effect attributing to a territory the product generated within it rather than the incomes received in it. |  | | Net interest expenses in the financial sector is seen as production and value added and is added to GDP. |
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http://encyclopedia.worldsearch.com/gross_domestic_product.htm
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| | Gross Domestic Product, by Lincoln Anderson: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: Library of Economics and Liberty |
 | | Gross domestic product, the official measure of total output of goods and services in the U.S. economy, represents the capstone and grand summary of the world's best system of economic statistics. |  | | But the GDP data show that the production of goods in the United States was rising rapidly after the 1982 recession and, by 1989, hit a ten-year high as a share of total GDP. |  | | GDP is represented as the sum of consumer spending, housing and business investment, net exports, and government purchases. |
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http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/GrossDomesticProduct.html
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| | State of Delaware - Delaware Economic Development Office (DEDO) News |
 | | The annual Gross State Product (GSP) is an estimate of the value of all economic activity that takes place in the state during the year. |  | | The Gross State Product for Delaware was $31.5 billion or $42,964 per capita - the highest in the nation per capita. |  | | Gross State Product is often used to evaluate and compare state economic activity for a given year, including growth rates. |
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http://www.state.de.us/dedo/news/042500gsp.shtml
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| | Gross Domestic Product |
 | | While Gross Domestic Production is a measure of production within the country income may be earned from factors of production that are used in other countries, such as overseas investments. |  | | Gross Domestic Product or GDP can be defined as the market value of all production for final demand within a given country for a given period. |  | | GDP is the primary measure of production in the System of National Accounts, the set of international guidelines for economic accounting that the U.S. economic accounts will be moving towards the mid 1990s and virtually all other countries have already adopted GDP as their primary measure of production. |
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http://www2.egr.uh.edu/~araguram/Gdp-fin-saby.htm
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| | S&P Affirms Puebla, Mexico 'mxA' Rating; Outlook To Positive |
 | | The gross state product was MxP164.6 billion in 1999, up 5.25% from the prior year. |  | | For fiscal 2001, the state presented a balanced budget. |  | | However, in an effort to reduce the short-term pressure of this liability on the state's budget, the current administration has submitted a reform of the pension law that is expected to increase the pension reserves to cover pension payments until 2035. |
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http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/11-15-2001/0001617335&EDATE=
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| | North Dakota's Gross State Product Reflects Shift Among Economic Sectors |
 | | Gross state product is often considered the state counterpart to the nation's gross domestic product, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. |  | | The service industry led all sectors of North Dakota's economy in 1997 by accounting for 18.4 percent of the gross state product, which is the value at retail prices of all goods and services produced within a state. |  | | North Dakota's gross state product totaled $15.8 billion in 1997, or just 0.2 percent of the U.S. total, thereby making it one of the smallest shares in the nation. |
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http://www.ext.nodak.edu/extnews/newsrelease/1999/062499/08ndgros.htm
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| | Children's report card: Growth in gross state product |
 | | Continuous growth in gross state product is a strong indication of a healthy economy. |  | | Strong worker productivity gains during the 1990s were a contributing factor in the robust growth in gross state product. |  | | Rationale: Gross state product is the most commonly used measure of overall economic production. |
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http://www.mnplan.state.mn.us/mm/indicator.html?Id=38
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| | News Release: Gross Domestic Product |
 | | GNP includes, and GDP excludes, net receipts of income from the rest of the world, which decreased $3.6 billion in the second quarter after increasing $2.4 billion in the first; in the second quarter, receipts increased $21.3 billion, and payments increased $24.9 billion. |  | | Gross national product Real gross national product -- the goods and services produced by the labor and property supplied by U.S. residents -- increased 3.2 percent in the second quarter, compared with an increase of 3.9 percent in the first. |  | | The current-dollar gross value added is deflated using the gross value added chain-type price index for nonfinancial industries from the GDP-by-industry accounts. |
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http://www.bea.gov/bea/newsrel/gdpnewsrelease.htm
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| | News Release: Gross Domestic Product |
 | | Real state and local government consumption expenditures and gross investment was unchanged in the first quarter; state and local government expenditures and gross investment increased 0.2 percent in the fourth. |  | | Gross domestic purchases Real gross domestic purchases -- purchases by U.S. residents of goods and services wherever produced -- increased 5.4 percent in the first quarter, compared with an increase of 2.9 percent in the fourth. |  | | The acceleration in real GDP growth in the first quarter primarily reflected an acceleration in PCE for durable goods, an upturn in federal government spending, and accelerations in equipment and software and in exports that were partly offset by a downturn in private inventory investment. |
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http://www.bea.gov/bea/newsrel/gdpnewsrelease.htm
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| | Gross Domestic Product Statistics |
 | | The GDP is the summation of the total consumption expenditures by households and private nonprofit institutions, general government expenditures, gross domestic fixed capital formation, change in stocks, and net export during a certain period, usually one-year. |  | | The GDP is equivalent to the total income received by factors of production engage in the process of production during a certain period, usually one year. |  | | The GDP is estimated as the total of Gross Value Added (GVA), or value of final goods and services produced by all economic units during a certain period usually one year. |
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http://www.bps.go.id/sector/nra/gdp
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| | GOAL 14 |
 | | The gross state product is the state equivalent of the gross national product. |  | | As illustrated, Kentucky has experienced a steady and consistent increase in both the per capita gross state product and the gross state product as a percentage of the U.S. average. |  | | To measure our performance on this vitally important goal, we turn first to the classic indicator of gross state product, then to measures of how citizens of the Commonwealth are faring in terms of income and wages. |
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http://www.kltprc.net/books/mm1998/Chpt_15.htm
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| | MaineScience - Commerce - News |
 | | Maryland's incubators are a significant economic boon to the state of Maryland, the study shows, estimating that incubator tenants and graduates generate between $184 and $530 million in gross state product and between $31 and $96 million in taxes annually. |  | | Deriving three independent methodologies to estimate the value of the services provided by the incubators, RESI applied these methodologies to the calculations of gross state product, personal income and fiscal return, creating a value-added measure of business incubation. |  | | Using the same estimation procedures, RESI calculated the gross state, product, personal income and fiscal return generated by these firms. |
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http://www.state.me.us/mstf/htdocs/news/2001/11_incubators.html
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| | gross national product -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | Although services such as tourism, restaurants, entertainment, and public administration contribute greatly to the gross national product, it is finance and trade that form the cornerstone of the service industry. |  | | National income accounting is a set of measures used to gauge the health of a nation's economy for a given period. |  | | There are basically two ways of measuring national economic activity: as the money value of the total production of goods and services during a given period (usually a year) or as the total of incomes derived from economic activity after allowance has been made for capital consumption. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9038185
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| | Gross domestic product |
 | | The income measure of GDP is based on total incomes from production. |  | | The output measure of GDP is obtained by combining value added (value of production less cost of inputs) by all businesses: agriculture, mining, manufacturing and services. |  | | GDP on an income or output basis is probably at factor cost while the expenditure measures are usually at market prices, but the only way to be sure is to check the basis of the figures in question. |
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http://countrydata.bvdep.com/EIU/Help/gdp.htm
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| | Economy of California - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | According to the California Legislative Analyst's Office, "California's gross state product is nearly $1.5 trillion..." ("Gross product in 2003", released in 2004). |  | | According to the California Department of Finance, California's gross state product is $1.543 trillion ("accelerated estimates for 2004 were completed and released in June 2005"). |  | | California is responsible for 14% of the United States' gross domestic product (GDP). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_California
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| | Legislative Search - |
 | | Should the gross state product decline, this 25 subparagraph shall not require aggregate appropriated 26 funds to be cut. |  | | HR 5 State budget; limit growth to growth in gross state product - CA 1. |  | | Smith 19th HR 5 A RESOLUTION proposing an amendment to the Constitution so as to limit the rate of growth in the state budget to the rate of growth in the gross state product unless approved by a two-thirds' vote of both houses of the General Assembly; and for other purposes. |
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http://www.state.ga.us/services/leg/ShowBillPre.cgi?year=1997&filename=1997/HR5
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| | Gross Domestic Product, by Lincoln Anderson: The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics: Library of Economics and Liberty |
 | | Gross domestic product, the official measure of total output of goods and services in the U.S. economy, represents the capstone and grand summary of the world's best system of economic statistics. |  | | For the United States, GDP replaces gross national product (GNP) as the main measure of production. |  | | But the GDP data show that the production of goods in the United States was rising rapidly after the 1982 recession and, by 1989, hit a ten-year high as a share of total GDP. |
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http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/GrossDomesticProduct.html
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| | GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT/THE GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT |
 | | Since Gross National Product includes products and services produced by Canadians outside Canada, it is not necessarily a good measure of the Canadian economy. |  | | The Gross Domestic Product is usually used to determine the growth rate of the economy. |  | | Gross Domestic Product at factor cost is based on the cost of all the factors of production used, including the profits made. |
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http://www.gnb.ca/0347/2e1.htm
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| | 030397ap.doc |
 | | Government--primarily federal government spending in Idaho--contributed 20 percent of the 1993 gross state product, followed by wood products at 11 percent, construction at 10 percent and electronics at 7 percent. |  | | In 1992, it contributed $1.63 billion to real gross state product, up from $1.3 billion in 1987 and $1.5 billion in 1982. |  | | The natural resource extraction industriesÑagriculture, mining, food processing and timberÑtogether accounted for more than 35 percent of the state's gross product and 33 percent of employment. |
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http://info.ag.uidaho.edu/resources/News/030397ap.doc
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| | Gross national product, GNP: definition and related links |
 | | Canadas annual gross national product (GNP) is the total income that residents of the country earn within the year. |  | | Thus, GNP is the sum of spending by consumers on food, clothing, rent, durable goods, personal services and other items, plus government expenditures on goods and services, plus business outlays on capital equipment and new factories and commercial buildings, plus the spending of foreigners when they buy exports of Canadians. |  | | The GNP is calculated in such a way that it is also equal to total spending on Canadians goods and services. |
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http://canadianeconomy.gc.ca/english/economy/gnp.html
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| | That Money Show - One Minute MBA - Gross Domestic Product |
 | | The GDP was adopted as the official measure of economic output in the 1990s to replace GNP -- the Gross National Product. |  | | The measure they use for change in the economy is Gross Domestic Product (GDP). |  | | The GDP is the total value of all the goods and services produced in the U.S., including everything we consume, everything the government purchases, all business investment, and all of our exports to the rest of the world, minus the imports we take in from the rest of the world. |
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http://www.pbs.org/wnet/moneyshow/mba/040601.html
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