National Income

National Income

What Is Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and it's types?

02 Oct 2025 Zinkpot — We Inform, You Perform. 541

WHAT?

 

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total monetary value of all final goods and services produced within a country’s borders during a specific period — usually a quarter or a year. It measures the size and health of an economy and is widely used to compare countries, track economic progress, and guide government policy.

“Gross” → calculated before deducting depreciation of machines, buildings, and other capital goods.
“Domestic” → includes production by anyone within the country (citizens or foreign-owned companies).
“Product” → counts only final goods & services to avoid double counting of intermediate goods.

 

Key Features of GDP

  1. Time-bound: Always tied to a specific period (quarterly or yearly).
  2. Location-based: Measures production inside national borders, no matter who owns the firm.
  3. Market Value: Expressed in money terms so that varied goods & services can be summed.
  4. Excludes Non-Market Work: Unpaid household work or informal barter is not fully captured.
  5. Indicator, Not Perfect: Shows production and income but not well-being or inequality.
     

Related terms

 

Type Meaning Why It Matters
Nominal GDP Value of goods & services at current market prices Shows raw economic size but includes inflation
Real GDP Adjusted for inflation using base-year prices Best for tracking true growth over time
GDP per Capita GDP ÷ Population Reflects average income/output per person
PPP-based GDP Adjusted for price level differences across countries Useful for comparing purchasing power internationally

 

How GDP Is Measured

 

Nominal vs. Real GDP

 

 

  1. Nominal GDP – at current prices; includes inflation.
  2. Real GDP – adjusted for inflation; better for comparing growth across years.
  3. GDP Deflator = Nominal GDP ÷ Real GDP × 100 → shows overall price change in the economy.

 

Why GDP Matters

 

  1. Health Check of Economy: High growth suggests expansion; low or negative means slowdown.
  2. Policy Planning: Governments and central banks (like the RBI) base fiscal and monetary policies on GDP trends.
  3. Global Ranking: Determines a nation’s economic power and investment attractiveness.
  4. Budget Ratios: Fiscal deficit or public debt are often compared to GDP.
  5. Business Decisions: Companies track GDP to plan expansion, hiring, and product launches.

 

Limitations of GDP

  1. Ignores inequality: GDP can rise even if the rich get richer but poor don’t benefit.
  2. Excludes unpaid & informal work: Large informal economies (like in India) are undercounted.
  3. No environmental accounting: Pollution and resource depletion are not deducted.
  4. Not a happiness or welfare metric: Doesn’t measure life satisfaction or health directly.
  5. Subject to revisions: Initial estimates often change when better data arrives.

 

India's GDP

 

for FY 2024-25, India's GDP stood at 331 lakh crore which translated to 4.3 trillion dollars. India's GDP has been fastest in the world with the following growth rates

Q2 2025 (Apr–Jun): +7.8% year-on-year
Q1 2025 (Jan–Mar): +7.4% year-on-year
FY 2024–25 overall: ~ 6.5% growth
IMF forecast for 2025: 6.4% — one of the fastest among major economies.

 

Sectoral Breakdown

 

  1. Services: Largest contributor — IT, finance, trade, tourism.
  2. Industry & Manufacturing: Rising with Make in India and PLI schemes.
  3. Agriculture: Still employs ~40% of workforce but contributes <20% of GDP (low productivity).

 

 

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