Save
AP Macroeconomics
Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
Save
Share
Learn
Content
Leaderboard
Share
Learn
Cards (40)
Unlike Real GDP, Nominal GDP does not adjust for
inflation
What does Real GDP measure?
Total value adjusted for inflation
Real GDP is calculated by adjusting Nominal GDP for
inflation
Nominal GDP
provides an unadjusted view of the economy's output based on current
prices
Real GDP
adjusts for inflation to provide a more accurate measure of changes in the volume of goods and services produced over
time
Nominal GDP reflects the impact of
price changes
.
True
Which type of GDP is the primary indicator for tracking economic expansion or contraction over time?
Real GDP
What does Real GDP reveal by adjusting for inflation?
True growth of the economy
Real GDP
is adjusted for inflation using a
base
year.
Nominal GDP reflects the impact of
inflation
Nominal GDP enables policymakers to gauge total
spending
Real GDP is a better indicator of productivity improvements because it isolates changes in output from changes in
prices
Real GDP is calculated by dividing nominal GDP by the GDP
deflator
What does Nominal GDP measure?
Total value at current prices
Real GDP is the preferred metric for analyzing economic performance over time.
True
How is Nominal GDP calculated?
Sum of goods at current prices
What is the primary difference between Nominal and Real GDP?
Inflation adjustment
Nominal GDP measures economic growth accurately over time.
False
Match the GDP type with its primary use:
Nominal GDP ↔️ Comparing total expenditure
Real GDP ↔️ Measuring economic growth
What does Nominal GDP allow policymakers and analysts to gauge?
Total spending on goods and services
Real GDP
eliminates the impact of price changes, allowing accurate comparisons of economic output across different
periods
How is Nominal GDP different from Real GDP in terms of price adjustments?
Nominal GDP is unadjusted
What does nominal GDP measure?
Goods and services at current prices
What are the primary uses of nominal GDP?
Comparing economy size and assessing total expenditure
Real GDP allows for meaningful comparisons of economic performance between
different
time periods or countries.
True
The GDP deflator measures the change in prices of all goods and services included in GDP.
True
Adjusting nominal GDP for inflation provides a
true measure
of economic output.
True
Nominal GDP is useful for comparing the overall size of an economy at
different
points in time.
True
Real GDP removes the impact of price changes to provide a more accurate measure of economic
output
Match the GDP metric with its definition:
Nominal GDP ↔️ Uses current market prices
Real GDP ↔️ Adjusts for inflation
If nominal GDP increases by 5% and inflation is 2%, the real GDP growth is
3%
.
True
What is Nominal GDP calculated using?
Current market prices
How is Real GDP adjusted for inflation?
Using a base year
Nominal GDP
helps assess the overall scale of an economy at different times without accounting for
inflation
Match the term with its definition:
Nominal GDP ↔️ Value at current prices
Real GDP ↔️ Value adjusted for inflation
What is the Real GDP growth if Nominal GDP grows by 5% and inflation is 2%?
3%
If nominal GDP increases by 7% and inflation is 3%, real GDP growth is
4%
.
True
Why is real GDP a better measure of economic growth than nominal GDP?
It adjusts for inflation
What is the key difference between nominal GDP and real GDP?
Inflation adjustment
What formula is used to calculate real GDP using the GDP deflator?
\frac{Nominal GDP}{GDP deflator}</latex>
See similar decks
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
25 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
2.4 Real vs. Nominal GDP
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
43 cards
Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
AP Macroeconomics
237 cards
2.4 Business Cycles
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
40 cards
2.5 Business Cycles
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
36 cards
Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
AP Macroeconomics
199 cards
2.3 Inflation
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
32 cards
2.2 Unemployment
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
34 cards
2.2 Unemployment
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
24 cards
4.1.2 Macroeconomic indicators
AQA A-Level Economics > 4. The national and international economy > 4.1 The measurement of macroeconomic performance
37 cards
2.1 National Income Accounts
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
93 cards
2.3 Price Indices and Inflation
AP Macroeconomics > Unit 2: Economic Indicators and the Business Cycle
49 cards
AP Macroeconomics
1287 cards