Net Domestic Product NDP
Net National product
A and C Net national product/ depreciation net national product/ capital consumption
You have to know that Gross includes Depreciation... And market price includes all the taxes... So...for calculation.. You have to add depreciation to domestic income, i.e; NDP at FC + depreciation....you will now get GDP at FC... Factor cost doesn't include Net Indirect TAX...so you have to add that...and you'll get the answer.... NDP at FC + depreciation + NIT = GDP at MP
Gross vs. Net in EconomicsIn Economics, gross means before deductions (brutto), e.g. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) refers to the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. Net Domestic Product (NDP) refers to the(GDP) minus depreciation on a country's Capital (economics) goods. (The NDP is thus, in effect, an estimate of how much the country has to spend to maintain the current GDP.)GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Spending + (Exports - Imports)GNP = GDP + Net Income from Assets AbroadGNP adds back (or subtracts away) from the GDP income made by domestic people in foreign countries minus income bade by foreigners domestically.GDP concern is BORDER, whereas GNP concern is PRODUCER.This link provides indepth understanding on GDP, GNP, Real GDP,Nominal GDP, GDP Deflator ....
According to the Solow model, two chief influences on real GDP, in the long-run, are the savings rate, s, and the capital-labour ratio, k. Because s and k are not exogenous to the model, factors that affect these variables also influence real GDP (including but not limited to: technology, capital depreciation, real investment, population growth, and inflation).
"The net domestic product (NDP) equals the gross domestic product (GDP) minus depreciation on a country's capital goods." from wikipedia entry en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Net_domestic_productPlease look it up first!
Net National product
A and C Net national product/ depreciation net national product/ capital consumption
A and C Net national product/ depreciation net national product/ capital consumption
A and C Net national product/ depreciation net national product/ capital consumption
You have to know that Gross includes Depreciation... And market price includes all the taxes... So...for calculation.. You have to add depreciation to domestic income, i.e; NDP at FC + depreciation....you will now get GDP at FC... Factor cost doesn't include Net Indirect TAX...so you have to add that...and you'll get the answer.... NDP at FC + depreciation + NIT = GDP at MP
Gross vs. Net in EconomicsIn Economics, gross means before deductions (brutto), e.g. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) refers to the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country in a given period of time. Net Domestic Product (NDP) refers to the(GDP) minus depreciation on a country's Capital (economics) goods. (The NDP is thus, in effect, an estimate of how much the country has to spend to maintain the current GDP.)GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government Spending + (Exports - Imports)GNP = GDP + Net Income from Assets AbroadGNP adds back (or subtracts away) from the GDP income made by domestic people in foreign countries minus income bade by foreigners domestically.GDP concern is BORDER, whereas GNP concern is PRODUCER.This link provides indepth understanding on GDP, GNP, Real GDP,Nominal GDP, GDP Deflator ....
it is that the human capital is one thing and the gdp is another thing.
what is GDP
According to the Solow model, two chief influences on real GDP, in the long-run, are the savings rate, s, and the capital-labour ratio, k. Because s and k are not exogenous to the model, factors that affect these variables also influence real GDP (including but not limited to: technology, capital depreciation, real investment, population growth, and inflation).
Please refer to the following Web site for a complete explanation on how depreciation affects the cost of capital: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depreciation
how do capital and human capital increase the gdp wealth and income of nations