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| | Measures of <b>nationalb> income and output - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Income (NNI) is NNP minus indirect taxes |  | | Gross <b>Nationalb> Product (GNP) is the total value of final goods and services produced in a year by domestically owned factors of production. |  | | Measures of <b>nationalb> income and output are used in economics to estimate the value of goods and services produced in an economy. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gross_National_Product
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| | MSN Encarta - Search Results - <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product |
 | | From the 1947 level of 231.6 billion dollars the gross <b>nationalb> product rose to 253 billions, while the <b>nationalb> income increased from 202.5 billion dollars to 224 billion. |  | | <b>Nationalb> income and gross <b>nationalb> product for the year â estimated at $276,000,000,000 and $327,000,000,000, respectively â were 15 per cent above their previous highs, attained in 1950. |  | | The gross <b>nationalb> product and <b>nationalb> income for the year â estimated at $259,000,000,000 and $222,000,000,000, respectively â were less than 2 per cent below the all-time highs attained in 1948 and substantially exceeded... |
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http://encarta.msn.com/net+national+product.html
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| | Glossary: N |
 | | It is equal to the balance on current account, <b>nationalb> income and product accounts less capital transfers to the rest of the world (<b>netb>). |  | | Consists of the <b>netb> operating surplus of private enterprises and the current surplus of government enterprises. |  | | An indirect measure of the <b>netb> acquisition of foreign assets by U.S. residents less the <b>netb> acquisition of U.S. assets by foreign residents. |
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http://www.bea.doc.gov/bea/glossary/glossary_n.htm
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| | milhesi.htm |
 | | <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product is the value obtained by deducting from the GNP the amortization corresponding to the depreciation due to ageing and depletion of constant capital goods utilized in the production. |  | | <b>Nationalb> income, in other words; <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product at Factor Cost is the value obtained by deducting indirect taxes paid by all sector from the <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product and by adding subsidies granted by government to the producers as compensation of duty loss. |  | | The production estimates of the Committee are pre-harvest figures.During or after the harvest there is some loss of output.SIS conducted a survey of agricultural products marketing covering the period of 1987-1988.Using the results of this survey some loss-ratios were estimated.In obtaining <b>netb> production figures these ratios are employed. |
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http://www.die.gov.tr/TURKISH/SOZLUK/milhesi.htm
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| | AmosWEB: GLOSS*arama: NNP |
 | | The abbreviation for <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product, which is the total market value of all final goods and services produced by citizens of an economy during a given period of time, usually a year, after adjusting for the depreciation of capital. |  | | <b>Netb> <b>nationalb> product also has the same relation to gross <b>nationalb> product that <b>netb> domestic product has to gross domestic product. |  | | <b>Netb> <b>nationalb> product has the same relation to <b>netb> domestic product (NDP) as gross <b>nationalb> product (GNP) has to gross domestic product (GDP). |
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http://www.amosweb.com/cgi-bin/gls.pl?fcd=dsp&key=NNP
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| | gross <b>nationalb> product |
 | | <b>Nationalb> income is equal to gross <b>nationalb> 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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| | << www.tanneri.com >> The Monthly E-Magazine For Young Hearts |
 | | <b>Nationalb> income is called the <b>Nationalb> Income at factor cost because here the <b>nationalb> income is calculated on the basis of the remuneration of factors of production. |  | | Because, GNP is the measurement of the productivity of the economy of a particular period. |  | | <b>Nationalb> income of the country can be defined as the total market value of all final goods and services produced in the economy in a year. |
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http://www.tanneri.com/ReadArticle.asp?ArticleID=582
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| | Gross <b>Nationalb> Product from astrologygardendesigns.com |
 | | Areas covered are the gross <b>nationalb> product, personal income and expenditure; corporate income appropriation account; revenue account of central Government including <b>Nationalb> Insurance funds; current account... |  | | Product Table 9** Growth of real Gross Domestic Product Table 10** General Government Financial Balances as a percentage of Gross <b>Nationalb> Product Public expenditure Table 11 The Budget Economic Forecast Table 12 Total Managed Expenditure (TME), general government receipts and public sector... |  | | Suppose that in the country of Betania, the real gross <b>nationalb> product in 1987 was £1483 billion (1972 equals 100). |
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http://www.astrologygardendesigns.com/Gross-National-Product.html
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| | Gross Domestic Product |
 | | GDP is the primary measure of production in the System of <b>Nationalb> 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. |  | | <b>Nationalb> Income is a measure of income earned in a given year after indirect business taxes. |  | | <b>Nationalb> Income is a key concept because it is equivalent to the total amount of income earned. |
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http://www2.egr.uh.edu/~araguram/Gdp-fin-saby.htm
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| | Gross Domestic Product Statistics |
 | | <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product (NNP) : is the Gross <b>Nationalb> Product subtracted by the total depreciation of fixed capital goods utilize in the production process. |  | | <b>Nationalb> Income (NI) : is the NNP at market prices minus <b>Netb> Indirect Taxes (Indirect taxes minus subsidies). |  | | The <b>netb> income from abroad constitutes all income of production factors (labour and capital) owned by residents and accrued from abroad minus similar payments made to non residents in abroad. |
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http://www.bps.go.id/sector/nra/gdp
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| | <b>Netb> <b>nationalb> product - finance |
 | | This is the most complete measure of productive activity by a country's nationals, though its accuracy suffers from the difficulty of measuring depreciation. |
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http://www.comparedefinitions.com/finance/net-national-product.html
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| | Discussion Questions: What are satellite accounts |
 | | <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product (NNP)/<b>netb> domestic product (NDP) the value obtained by subtracting the depreciation of humanmade capital from gross <b>nationalb> product or gross domestic product. |  | | <b>netb> receipts returns from the sale of a resource, equal to revenues minus production costs. |  | | <b>netb> investment the process of adding to productive capital over time, calculated by subtracting depreciation from gross, or total, investment. |
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http://faculty.csusb.edu/urmann/vocab_ch8.htm
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| | <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Saving |
 | | <b>Netb> <b>nationalb> saving can be divided into two components: saving done by the private sector and saving done by the government. |  | | These figures are based on saving as officially measured in the <b>nationalb> income and product accounts. |  | | <b>Netb> saving in the private sector can be further broken down into saving undertaken by corporations (that is, undistributed profits) and saving undertaken by households (that is, spending less than income). |
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http://www.urban.org/Template.cfm?NavMenuID=24&template=/TaggedContent/ViewPublication.cfm&PublicationID=8918
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| | <b>NETb> <b>NATIONALb> PRODUCT (NNP) |
 | | NNP represents a difference between a gross <b>nationalb> product and sum of the depreciation charges in <b>nationalb> economy (see Amortization). |  | | See also: Parameters of the system of the <b>nationalb> accounts |  | | - one from generalizing statistical parameters used in the system of the <b>nationalb> accounts. |
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http://www.bashedu.ru/konkurs/luchenko/eng/base/chistiynacionalniyprodukt.htm
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| | News Release: Gross Domestic Product |
 | | GNP includes, and GDP excludes, <b>netb> 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 <b>nationalb> product Real gross <b>nationalb> 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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| | gross <b>nationalb> product -- Encyclopædia Britannica |
 | | There are basically two ways of measuring <b>nationalb> 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. |  | | Although services such as tourism, restaurants, entertainment, and public administration contribute greatly to the gross <b>nationalb> product, it is finance and trade that form the cornerstone of the service industry. |  | | <b>Nationalb> income accounting is a set of measures used to gauge the health of a nation's economy for a given period. |
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http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9038185
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| | Product |
 | | You will calculate and examine the growth of their real <b>netb> <b>nationalb> products, their labor forces, their real capital stocks, and their productivity. |  | | The total factor productivity is calculated by subtracting from the growth rate of NNP the growth rates of labor and capital, each weighted by its average share in <b>nationalb> income over the time interval in question. |  | | (Gross <b>Nationalb> Product less Depreciation of capital stock.) For the UK this is measured in millions of pounds sterling,for Germany in millions of marks, and for France in millions of francs. |
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http://www.business.uiuc.edu/lneal/product1.htm
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| | Indicators of SD: UN CSD Methodology Sheets - <b>Netb> resource transfer/Gross <b>Nationalb> Product |
 | | <b>Netb> long-term resource flows are defined as the sum of <b>netb> resource flows on long- term debt (excluding International Monetary Fund (IMF)), that is disbursements less principal repayments, plus non-debt-creating flows. |  | | <b>Netb> resource transfers are <b>netb> long-term resource flows less interest payments on long-term loans and profit remittances on foreign direct investment. |  | | Foreign direct investment is defined as investment that is made to acquire a lasting management interest (usually 10% of voting stock) in an enterprise operating in a country other than that of the investor, the investor~s purpose being to have an effective voice in the management of the enterprise. |
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http://esl.jrc.it/envind/un_meths/UN_ME066.htm
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| | Gross <b>nationalb> product, GNP: definition and related links |
 | | Canadas annual gross <b>nationalb> product (GNP) is the total income that residents of the country earn within the year. |  | | The GNP is calculated in such a way that it is also equal to total spending on Canadians goods and services. |  | | 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. |
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http://canadianeconomy.gc.ca/english/economy/gnp.html
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| | Principles of Macroeconomics - Section 6: Main |
 | | To correct for this <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product (NNP) is used, which is defined as GDP minus depreciation. |  | | The <b>netb> result is a redistribution of spending from the private to the public sector in the long run and a reduction of beneficial international trade activity when trading partners retaliate with their own higher tariffs. |  | | In this case growth is nonexistent (the production possibilities frontier is not expanding) and the inefficient use of the available resources (excess unemployment) is represented by economic production at a point within the production possibilities frontier. |
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http://www.colorado.edu/Economics/courses/econ2020/section6/section6-main.html
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| | chap14.asp |
 | | indirect taxes and subsidies are subtracted from <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product. |  | | indirect taxes are added to and subsidies are subtracted from <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product. |  | | the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a given period by factors of production owned by a country's citizens, regardless of where output is produced. |
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http://www.booksites.net/sloman/mcq/chap14.asp
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| | DEPweb: GNP per Capita Text 1 |
 | | Gross <b>nationalb> product (GNP) per capita is the dollar value of a country& final output of goods and services in a year, divided by its population. |  | | Countries with a GNP per capita in 1998 of $9,361 or more are described as high income, between $761 and $9,360 as middle income, and $760 or less as low income. |  | | Knowing a country& GNP per capita is a good first step toward understanding the country& economic strengths and needs, as well as the general standard of living enjoyed by the average citizen. |
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http://www.worldbank.org/depweb/english/modules/economic/gnp
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| | Gross <b>Nationalb> Product (GNP) |
 | | Gross domestic product (GDP) The market value of goods and services produced over time including the income of foreign corporations and foreign residents working in the U.S., but excluding the income of U.S. residents and corporations overseas. |  | | Gross estate The total value of a person's property and assets before accounting for debts, taxes, and liabilities. |  | | Gross profit margin Gross profit divided by sales, which is equal to each sales dollar left over after paying for the cost of goods sold. |
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http://www.getfolio.com/glossary_finance/g5.asp
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| | Nat' Academies Press, Assigning Economic Value to Natural Resources (1994) |
 | | Suppose two economies produce the same real <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product, with due allowance for depreciation of fixed capital, but one of them is wasteful of natural resources and casually allows its environment to deteriorate, while the other conserves resources and preserves the natural environment. |  | | Properly defined and properly calculated, this year's <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product can always be regarded as this year's interest on society's total stock of capital. |  | | At each instant, <b>netb> <b>nationalb> product indicates the largest consumption level that can be allowed this year if future consumption is never to be allowed to decrease. |
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http://books.nap.edu/openbook/0309051436/html/19.html
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| | NIPA: <b>Nationalb> Income and Product Accounts |
 | | Prior to 1959, current surplus of government enterprises (line 22) is not shown separately; subsidies are included <b>netb> of the current surplus of government enterprises in line 18. |  | | Prior to 1959, subsidies (line 20) and the current surplus of government enterprises (line 25) are not shown separately; subsidies are presented <b>netb> of the current surplus of government enterprises. |  | | Chained (2000) dollar series are calculated as the product of the chain-type quantity index and the 2000 current-dollar value of the corresponding series, divided by 100. |
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http://www.economagic.com/nipa.htm
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| | University of Edinburgh, Economics intranet |
 | | What is the distinction between GDP, Gross <b>Nationalb> Product (GNP) and <b>Netb> <b>Nationalb> Product? |  | | Productive non-market activities ignored by <b>Nationalb> Accounts, e.g. |  | | Using the table in The Expenditure Approach, Q9: <b>Nationalb> Income Accounts', calculate GDP at market prices, GDP at factor cost, GNP at factor cost and NNP. |
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http://www.econ.ed.ac.uk/intranet/winecon/105.html
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