National Income and Government Taxes
Subject: Economics
Topic: 5
Cambridge Code: 0455 / 2281
National Income Measures
Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
GDP - Total value of goods and services produced within country
Where:
- C = Consumer spending
- I = Investment
- G = Government spending
- X = Exports
- M = Imports
Characteristics:
- Includes all production within border
- Regardless of who owns factors
- Market prices
- Annual measurement
Gross National Income (GNI)
GNI - Total value earned by residents
Difference from GDP:
- GDP: Production location (physical border)
- GNI: Who earns income (nationality)
Example:
- Japanese factory in UK: Counts in UK GDP, but not GNI
- UK factory in Japan: Counts in UK GNI, but not GDP
Real vs Nominal
Nominal GDP:
- Current prices
- Affected by inflation
- Can increase without real growth
Real GDP:
- Constant/base year prices
- Inflation removed
- Shows true economic growth
Aggregate Demand (AD)
Aggregate Demand - Total spending on goods and services
Components
Consumer spending (C):
- Largest component (~60%)
- Affected by income, confidence, interest rates
Investment (I):
- Business capital spending
- Affected by profit expectations, interest rates
Government spending (G):
- Government purchases
- Transfer payments not included
- Affected by policy
Net exports (X - M):
- Exports minus imports
- Affected by exchange rates, world income
AD Curve
Downward sloping (real AD axis):
- Price level ↑ → Real AD ↓ (wealth effect, interest effect)
- Price level ↓ → Real AD ↑
Taxation
Tax - Compulsory payment to government
Tax Types
Direct taxes (income-based):
- Income tax
- Corporate tax
- Inheritance tax
Indirect taxes (expenditure-based):
- Sales tax/VAT
- Excise tax on specific goods
- Tariffs on imports
Progressive vs Flat
Progressive tax:
- Tax rate increases with income
- % of income increases as income ↑
- Example: Income tax (lower rate at lower income)
Regressive tax:
- Tax rate decreases with income
- % of income decreases as income ↑
- Example: VAT (same % for all, but lower earners pay larger % of income)
Proportional tax:
- Tax rate stays same
- Fixed % of income
Tax Functions
Revenue raising: Finance government spending Redistribution: Progressive tax reduces inequality Protection: Tariffs protect domestic industry Pollution control: Carbon tax discourages pollution
Government Spending
Public spending - Government expenditure
Types
Current spending:
- Wages for public employees
- Running NHS, schools
- Interest on debt
Capital spending (Investment):
- Infrastructure (roads, bridges)
- Schools, hospitals
- Transport
Multiplier Effect
Multiplier - Initial spending creates additional income
Example: Government builds school (£1m)
- Construction workers earn £1m (income)
- They spend, say, 80% = £0.8m (leakage 20%)
- Suppliers earn £0.8m, spend 80% = £0.64m
- Further rounds continue
Total income generated:
Where MPC = Marginal Propensity to Consume
Fiscal Policy
Fiscal policy - Using taxation and government spending
Expansionary Fiscal Policy
Objective: Increase AD when economy weak
Methods:
- Decrease taxes (consumers spend more)
- Increase government spending
- Or combination
Effect:
- AD shifts right
- Output increases
- Employment increases
- May cause inflation if overused
Contractionary Fiscal Policy
Objective: Decrease AD when economy overheating
Methods:
- Increase taxes
- Decrease government spending
Effect:
- AD shifts left
- Output decreases
- Inflation controlled
- May increase unemployment
Budget Position
Budget balance - Tax revenue minus government spending
Budget surplus:
- Revenue > Spending
- Government saves
- Contractionary
Budget deficit:
- Spending > Revenue
- Government borrows
- Expansionary
National Debt
National debt - Accumulated government borrowing
Consequence of persistent deficits:
- Interest payments increase
- Future flexibility limited
- Risk of loss of confidence (if very high)
Macroeconomic Objectives
Governments aim for:
- Economic growth: Increase real GDP
- Low unemployment: Full employment
- Price stability: Low inflation
- Balance of payments: Sustainable trade
- Equity/fairness: Reduce inequality
Trade-offs
Inflation vs Unemployment (Phillips Curve):
- Lower unemployment → Higher inflation (in short run)
- Higher unemployment → Lower inflation
Growth vs Inflation:
- Faster growth → Inflation risk
- Controlling inflation → Growth slows
Difficult to achieve all simultaneously
Key Points
- GDP: Production within territory
- GNI: Income earned by residents
- Real GDP: Controls for inflation
- AD: C + I + G + (X - M)
- Direct taxes on income, indirect on spending
- Progressive tax reduces inequality
- Fiscal policy: G spending and taxation
- Multiplier: Spending creates further income
- Trade-offs between objectives
- Government uses fiscal policy to manage economy
Practice Questions
- Calculate GDP and GNI
- Compare nominal and real GDP
- Categorize taxes
- Analyze tax progressivity
- Calculate multiplier effects
- Design fiscal policy
- Analyze budget position
- Compare policy options
Revision Tips
- Know GDP calculation
- Understand national accounts
- Know tax types clearly
- Understand fiscal policy
- Know multiplier concept
- Understand macroeconomic trade-offs
- Practice calculations
- Know policy tools