Economics has yet to come up with better measures of economic performance of an economy and well-being of the society than total output and output per capita.
The total output sets the constraint on how much a country’s population can consume, invest, export, and allocate to government spending including defense of the country.
The material well-being of the country is measured by the output per capita, which is simply the total output divided by the population. We will use the gross domestic product (GDP) as a measure of total output.
The most used way of measuring total output of a country is gross domestic product (GDP). GDP is all final goods and services valued at market prices and produced within domestic borders of a country in a given period.
A country produces many different products and services. According to a source, as of 2016, Amazon alone carried 12 million products alone excluding books, media, beverages and services. If we included products available from marketplace sellers this figure would jump to 354 million plus products.
The challenge, therefore, is that we should find a way to aggregate these different products and services into a single value. How? Imagine a very small date farmer, Abdullah, producing two types of dates, Ajwa and Anbara – 1,000 kilograms of Ajwa with market price of 6 SAR per kilogram and 1,500 kilograms of Anbara, with market price of 5 SAR per kilogram in 2022.
We cannot add 1,000 kilograms of Ajwa to 1,500 kilograms of Anbara to conclude that Abdullah produced 2,500 kilograms of dates in 2022. That would be wrong because Ajwa dates are not the same as Anbara dates; they are essentially two different products! Instead, we should calculate total SAR values for each type of date produced at their market prices, that is, 6,000 SAR for Ajwa and 7,500 SAR for Anbara, and then add these SAR amounts together to conclude that total SAR value of Abdullah’s production is 13,500 SAR in 2022.
GDP ideally aims at to be all inclusive. However, there are products that GDP excludes because of challenges associated in measuring them.
items that sold illicitly are not part of the total output because we cannot measure them. Tomatoes grown by Abdullah in a greenhouse in his garden for home consumption and Mohammed’s homemade medicines against common cold are also excluded because it is impossible to measure them.
Mohammed’s stay-at-home wife Reema’s services such as housekeeping and cooking are excluded, again, there comes the issue of impossibility of measuring them. These exclusions might lead a way to an inconsistent result.
Imagine that Reema dies and after her death, Mohammed hires a housekeeper and pays her to do the housekeeping and cooking that Reema was doing before her death. Since now the housekeeper’s services are measurable (after all Mohammed writes a check to the housekeeper or deposit the amount to the bank account of the housekeeper directly) the total output would increase even though the housekeeper’s services are the exact substitute of Reema’s in quantities.
Now we learn what GDP is, we can confidently declare that in 2020, Saudi Arabia’s GDP was 2,638 billion SARs, or USD 700.1 billion, which includes all the date farmers’ dates, date cake bakers’ cakes, all the housekeepers’ services, Lucid Sedan cars, and so on, all produced in 2020 and all as final goods and services within the borders of the country.
It is a common practice to compare one country’s GDP with another country (or with a group of countries) to get a sense of one’s country’s relative aggregate economic position in the sample of countries chosen. We will do such comparisons later. However, for the fun of it, let’s compare GDP of Saudi Arabia with Apple, Inc.’s revenue. After all, Apple’s revenue is a part of GDP of the United States. In 2020, all final goods and services sold by Apple, Inc. was USD 275.5 billion, almost 40% of 2020 GDP of Saudi Arabia.
Three Approaches to GDP: Production, Expenditure, and Income