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Aggregates, GDP Deflator, CPI & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Economics CBSE Theory Chapter 2 — National Income Accounting ⏱ ~28 min
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Class 12 · Introductory Macroeconomics · Chapter 2

Aggregates, GDP Deflator, GDP & Welfare and National Income Exercises

From GDP to Personal Disposable Income, every macroeconomic aggregate is just GDP with one or two adjustments — for depreciation, NFIA, indirect taxes, retained profits or transfers. Three price indices (GDP deflator, CPI, WPI) help us strip out inflation. And a hard question hangs over them all: does GDP really capture the welfare of the people of a country? In this final part we tie up every loose end of the chapter — and then work through every NCERT exercise with a complete model answer.

2.11 The Family of National-Income Aggregates

Once we have GDP measured at market prices, we can derive a whole family of related aggregates by applying three short adjustments:

Net = Gross − Depreciation? (D)
National = Domestic + Net Factor Income from Abroad? (NFIA)
Factor Cost = Market Price − Net Indirect Taxes (NIT)

Apply these three filters in any combination and you arrive at the eight standard aggregates. Let us walk through each one with its formula.

2.11.1 GDP at Market Prices (GDPMP)

The market value of all final goods and services produced within India's domestic territory in a year, regardless of who owns the producing firm. Korean-owned Hyundai's Chennai plant is in; Tata Steel's UK operations are out.

📐 Formula
GDPMP = C + I + G + X − M

2.11.2 GDP at Factor Cost (GDPFC)

GDP measured at the prices producers actually receive — strip out indirect taxes and add back subsidies.

📐 Formula
GDPFC = GDPMP − Net Indirect Taxes
where Net Indirect Taxes = Indirect Taxes − Subsidies.

2.11.3 Net Domestic Product (NDP)

GDP minus depreciation. NDP tells policymakers how much production is left after just maintaining the country's existing capital stock — anything above NDP is fresh net addition to wealth.

📐 Formulas
NDPMP = GDPMP − Depreciation
NDPFC = NDPMP − Net Indirect Taxes

2.11.4 Gross National Product (GNP)

GNP? shifts the lens from "where production happens" (GDP) to "who earns the income". An Indian techie working in Saudi Arabia adds to Saudi GDP but to Indian GNP; the Hyundai plant's repatriated profits add to Indian GDP but to Korean GNP.

📐 Formula
GNPMP = GDPMP + NFIA
where NFIA = factor income earned by Indians abroad − factor income earned by foreigners in India.

2.11.5 Net National Product (NNP)

GNP minus depreciation — the amount available for current consumption without eroding the capital stock.

📐 Formulas
NNPMP = GNPMP − Depreciation
NNPMP = NDPMP + NFIA

2.11.6 NNP at Factor Cost = National Income (NI)

This is the famous figure called simply National Income. It equals NNP at market prices minus net indirect taxes — i.e. the total income that actually accrues to the four factors of production owned by the residents of the country in a year.

📐 Formulas
NI = NNPFC = NNPMP − Net Indirect Taxes
Equivalently NI = NDPFC + NFIA.

2.11.7 Personal Income (PI)

Not all of NI reaches households. Firms keep back undistributed profits (UP) and pay corporate tax (CT). Households make some net interest payments to firms/government (NIH). On the other hand, households receive transfer payments (TrH) like pensions, scholarships and subsidies. Adjusting for these:

📐 Formula
PI = NI − UP − Net Interest Paid by Households − Corporate Tax + Transfer Payments to Households

2.11.8 Personal Disposable Income (PDI)

Even PI is not what households actually get to spend or save — they must first pay personal tax (income tax) and non-tax payments (fines, fees).

📐 Formula
PDI = PI − Personal Tax Payments − Non-Tax Payments

PDI is what the household ultimately decides between spending and saving — and that decision drives the consumption function we will study in later chapters.

From GDP to Personal Disposable Income — The Adjustment Map

Bloom: L4 Analyse
From GDP to Personal Disposable Income GDP at MP C+I+G+X−M + NFIA GNP at MP GDP+NFIA − Dep. NNP at MP GNP−Dep − NIT NNP at FC = NI National Income − UP − CT − NIH + TrH Personal Income PI − PTP − NP PDI — what households spend Key: NIT = Net Indirect Taxes UP = Undistributed Profits CT = Corporate Tax NIH = Net Interest by Households TrH = Transfers to Households PTP = Personal Tax Payments NP = Non-Tax Payments

Figure 2.6 (after NCERT Fig. 2.3): The full chain from GDP at market prices down to Personal Disposable Income, with all six adjustments.

2.11.9 Two Bonus Aggregates Used in India

India's national accounts also publish two further aggregates:

  • National Disposable Income = NNPMP + Other current transfers from the rest of the world. Captures the maximum value of goods and services available to the domestic economy (gifts, foreign aid included).
  • Private Income = Factor income from net domestic product accruing to the private sector + National debt interest + NFIA + Current transfers from government + Other net transfers from the rest of the world.
📊 Quick Reference — Per Capita Income
Per Capita Income = National Income ÷ Population. India's per-capita income has grown roughly 5-fold in real terms since 1991. But the aggregate hides large state-wise disparities — Sikkim's per-capita NSDP is many times Bihar's.

2.12 Nominal vs Real GDP — and the GDP Deflator

Suppose India's GDP doubled between 2010 and 2020. Did the country actually produce twice as much, or did prices simply double? To distinguish, economists separate nominal from real GDP.

  • Nominal GDP? — values output at current prices. Mixes changes in volume with changes in price.
  • Real GDP? — values output at constant prices of a chosen base year. Strips out price changes; captures pure volume growth.

2.12.1 NCERT's Bread Example

An economy produces only bread. In 2000 it produced 100 loaves at ₹10 per loaf, so nominal GDP = ₹1,000. In 2001 it produced 110 loaves at ₹15 per loaf, so nominal GDP = 110 × 15 = ₹1,650. Real GDP in 2001, valued at the 2000 price (the base-year price) = 110 × 10 = ₹1,100. So although nominal GDP grew by 65%, real growth was only 10%.

📐 GDP Deflator
GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP ÷ Real GDP) × 100
In our bread example: GDP Deflator (2001) = (1,650 ÷ 1,100) × 100 = 150. The deflator captures the pure price change between 2000 and 2001 — prices rose by 50%.

India: Nominal vs Real GDP — Why the Gap Matters (illustrative)

Figure 2.7: Nominal GDP grows faster than real GDP — the difference is inflation. The vertical gap between the two lines, expressed as a ratio, gives the GDP deflator.

2.13 CPI and WPI — Two Other Price Indices

Beyond the GDP deflator, two more price indices are used in India to track inflation in everyday life and in industry:

🛍️
CPI — Consumer Price Index
Tracks retail prices paid by a representative consumer for a fixed basket of goods. Includes imports. Used for cost-of-living adjustments and dearness allowance.
🏭
WPI — Wholesale Price Index
Tracks bulk/wholesale prices of goods (raw materials, semi-finished). Excludes services. Until 2014 was India's headline inflation measure.
📐
GDP Deflator
Ratio of nominal to real GDP. Covers all domestically produced goods and services. Excludes imports. Weights vary with production each year.

2.13.1 NCERT's CPI Example

Consider an economy that produces two goods, rice and cloth. A representative consumer buys 90 kg of rice and 5 pieces of cloth per year. In the base year 2000, rice was ₹10/kg and cloth was ₹100/piece. The total basket cost = (10 × 90) + (100 × 5) = ₹900 + ₹500 = ₹1,400. In the current year 2005, rice is ₹15/kg and cloth is ₹120/piece. The same basket now costs (15 × 90) + (120 × 5) = ₹1,350 + ₹600 = ₹1,950.

📐 CPI Calculation
CPI = (Cost of basket in current year ÷ Cost of basket in base year) × 100
CPI (2005) = (1,950 ÷ 1,400) × 100 = 139.29 (approximately). Prices have risen by about 39.3% over five years.

2.13.2 Three Reasons CPI ≠ GDP Deflator

  1. Coverage. CPI covers only the basket bought by consumers. GDP deflator covers all goods and services produced.
  2. Imports. CPI includes prices of imported consumer goods (since consumers buy them). GDP deflator excludes imports because GDP is domestic production only.
  3. Weights. CPI uses fixed weights from a base-year survey. GDP deflator's weights change every year as production patterns change.

GDP Deflator vs CPI — Two Indices, Two Stories (illustrative trend)

Figure 2.8: GDP deflator and CPI usually move together but can diverge — CPI tends to be more volatile because food and fuel (heavily weighted in the consumer basket) swing more than the broader economy.

THINK ABOUT IT — Why does India use CPI as headline inflation today?
Bloom: L4 Analyse

Until 2014 India tracked WPI as its headline inflation measure. In 2014 the Reserve Bank of India switched to CPI. (a) Why might CPI be a better measure for monetary policy targeting? (b) Why was WPI dominant earlier? Discuss.

✅ Answer
(a) CPI directly measures the cost of living that ordinary households face — exactly the variable the central bank wants to keep stable. WPI excludes services, which form ~55% of India's GVA, and excludes the retail margin most consumers pay. (b) WPI was dominant historically because wholesale price data was easier to collect from organized mandis and factories, while building a robust nation-wide CPI series across rural and urban India took decades. Today, the new CPI (Combined) covers most of the country, so RBI uses it as the inflation-targeting variable (target band: 4% ± 2%).

2.14 GDP and Welfare — Three Big Limitations

Should we treat GDP — or even real GDP per capita — as a good measure of how well-off a country's people are? It is tempting: more GDP means more goods, services and incomes available. But the textbook is firmly cautious. There are at least three reasons why GDP is not a clean welfare index.

2.14.1 (1) Distribution of GDP — How Uniform Is It?

NCERT's neat numerical example: in year 2000, an imaginary country has 100 people each earning ₹10 → GDP = ₹1,000. In 2001, 90 of those people earn ₹9 each, while 10 earn ₹20 each → GDP = (90 × 9) + (10 × 20) = ₹810 + ₹200 = ₹1,010. GDP rose by ₹10. But 90% of the people are worse off (real income fell from ₹10 to ₹9), while only 10% gained (their income doubled). If welfare depends on the percentage of people better off, GDP misled us.

2.14.2 (2) Non-Monetary Exchanges

Many activities never enter monetary accounts. Domestic services performed by women at home (cooking, cleaning, child-rearing) are not paid for — and so don't enter GDP. Barter exchanges in the informal sector don't enter either. In developing countries this systematic underestimation of GDP can be substantial. The same cooking done at home (excluded) becomes "GDP" the moment it is sold in a restaurant — even though the underlying activity is identical.

2.14.3 (3) Externalities

An externality? is a benefit or harm that one economic agent causes another, for which no payment is made. NCERT's example: an oil refinery refines crude and adds value (which enters GDP). But the refinery also pollutes the river, harming households downstream and killing the fish on which fishermen depend. The harm doesn't reduce GDP at all — so GDP overestimates welfare in the presence of negative externalities. Conversely, with positive externalities (a beautiful park, scientific research) GDP underestimates welfare.

Why GDP Misses the Welfare Picture

Bloom: L5 Evaluate
Three Reasons GDP is NOT a Pure Welfare Measure 1. INEQUALITY GDP can rise even when 90% of people are worse off, if 10% become richer enough. Average ≠ welfare Need: Gini coefficient, poverty headcount, income share of bottom 50% 2. NON-MONETARY ACTIVITIES Home-cooked meals, unpaid care work, informal barter, subsistence farming. GDP underestimates Need: Time-use surveys, imputed value of unpaid household work 3. EXTERNALITIES Pollution, deforestation, noise — costs to others that GDP ignores. GDP can overestimate Need: Green GDP, environmental accounts, SDG indicators
🌐 The Alternative — HDI
Recognising these limits, the United Nations Development Programme since 1990 has published the Human Development Index (HDI) combining (i) per-capita real income, (ii) life expectancy at birth and (iii) average years of schooling. India ranked 134/193 in HDI 2022. HDI is not perfect either, but it captures more of welfare than GDP alone. Other newer indicators include the OECD Better Life Index, Bhutan's Gross National Happiness, the SDG Index and the Inclusive Wealth Index.
DISCUSS — Pollution and GDP
Bloom: L5 Evaluate

A coal-fired power plant in your district produces ₹500 crore of electricity in a year (which adds to GDP). It also emits pollution that causes ₹120 crore of estimated health costs to nearby residents (asthma treatment, lost workdays). Discuss: (a) by how much does conventional GDP overstate the true welfare contribution of the plant? (b) Should environmental costs be subtracted to compute "Green GDP"? (c) What practical difficulties would such a calculation face?

✅ Discussion Pointers
(a) Conventional GDP records ₹500 crore of value but ignores ₹120 crore of pollution cost — so welfare contribution is overestimated by ₹120 crore. True net welfare = 500 − 120 = ₹380 crore. (b) Yes — environmental accounting (sometimes called Green GDP or System of Environmental-Economic Accounts) tries to do exactly this. India launched a Green GDP project in 2010. (c) The biggest difficulty is monetising externalities — what is the rupee value of a tonne of CO₂, a polluted river, a lost species? Different methods (cost of damage, willingness to pay, replacement cost) give very different answers.

2.15 Conclusion — A Map of the Whole Chapter

We began with Adam Smith's question — what is the wealth of nations? — and built up the modern toolkit for measuring it. We learned to spot final from intermediate goods, stock from flow, gross from net, domestic from national, market price from factor cost. We saw the circular flow of income and the three identical methods of measuring GDP at points A, B and C of that flow. We then climbed the ladder of aggregates from GDP to PDI, and met the price indices that strip out inflation. Finally we acknowledged GDP's three big blind spots — inequality, non-monetary work, and externalities — and the alternative indicators that try to address them. The vocabulary and machinery of this chapter will reappear in every subsequent chapter — Chapter 3 (Money and Banking), Chapter 4 (Income Determination), Chapter 5 (Government Budget) and Chapter 6 (Open Economy) all build on these foundations.

2.16 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers

📖 NCERT Chapter 2 — Exercises with Detailed Solutions
Exercise 1
What are the four factors of production and what are the remunerations to each of these called?
Model Answer: The four factors of production are:
  1. Labour — human effort, both physical and mental — earns wages and salaries (also called compensation of employees).
  2. Capital — produced means of production, like machines, tools, factory buildings — earns interest.
  3. Land — fixed natural resources including soil, mineral deposits and natural water — earns rent.
  4. Entrepreneurship — the willingness to bear the risk of organising the other three factors into a productive enterprise — earns profit.
For self-employed persons (a farmer or kirana shopkeeper) where wages and profit cannot be cleanly separated, the income is sometimes called mixed income.
Exercise 2
Why should the aggregate final expenditure of an economy be equal to the aggregate factor payments? Explain.
Model Answer: In the circular flow, every rupee of final expenditure in the economy is received by some firm as sales revenue. The firm uses this revenue to pay the four factors of production who produced the goods sold — labour gets wages, capital gets interest, land gets rent, and the entrepreneur retains profit.

Whatever is left of revenue after paying wages, rent and interest is profit (residual income to the entrepreneur). So total revenue = wages + rent + interest + profit = aggregate factor payments. And aggregate revenue = aggregate final expenditure (because firms' revenue comes from final spending only — intermediate sales cancel out across firms).

Therefore: Aggregate Final Expenditure ≡ Aggregate Revenue ≡ Aggregate Factor Payments. The identity holds at every point in the circular flow — it is the foundation of the equivalence between the expenditure method and the income method of measuring GDP.
Exercise 3
Distinguish between stock and flow. Between net investment and capital, which is a stock and which is a flow? Compare net investment and capital with flow of water into a tank.
Model Answer:
Stock is a variable defined at a particular point in time (it has no time dimension attached). Examples: capital, money supply, population, debt balance, inventories.
Flow is a variable defined over a period of time (it must specify "per year", "per month", etc.). Examples: income, consumption, investment, exports, depreciation.

Capital is a stock — it is the total accumulated value of plant, machinery, buildings etc. existing at the end of (say) 31 March 2025.
Net investment is a flow — it is the addition to that capital stock during a period (say, the financial year 2024-25). Net investment = Gross investment − Depreciation.

Tank analogy: Imagine a water tank with a tap pouring water in and a small leak draining water out. The amount of water inside the tank at any moment is the stock (= capital). The rate at which water flows in from the tap (per minute) is gross investment. The leak is depreciation. Net inflow = Tap inflow − Leak outflow = net investment, which adds to the tank's stock over time. The tank level (stock) is measurable at a moment; the flow rates only make sense over a period.
Exercise 4
What is the difference between planned and unplanned inventory accumulation? Write down the relation between change in inventories and value added of a firm.
Model Answer:
Planned inventory accumulation happens when a firm deliberately increases its stock of unsold goods. For example, a shirt-maker expecting to sell 1,000 shirts and wanting to raise inventories from 100 to 200 shirts will produce 1,100 shirts. If sales actually equal 1,000, inventories rise by 100 — exactly as planned.

Unplanned inventory accumulation happens when actual sales fall short of expectations. The same shirt-maker produces 1,000 shirts expecting to sell all of them; if actual sales are only 600, the firm is left with 400 unsold shirts — an unexpected (unplanned) accumulation. Conversely, if sales are unexpectedly high (say 1,050), the firm has unplanned decumulation of inventories (sells 50 from old stock).

Relation with value added:
Production of the firm during the year ≡ Sales during the year + Change in inventories during the year.
Therefore Change in inventories ≡ Production − Sales.
And Gross Value Added ≡ Production − Intermediate goods used = (Sales + Change in inventories) − Intermediate goods. So change in inventories enters value added with a positive sign — it is treated as part of investment.
Exercise 5
Write down the three identities of calculating the GDP of a country by the three methods. Also briefly explain why each of these should give us the same value of GDP.
Model Answer: The three identities are:
  1. Product (Value Added) Method: GDP ≡ Σ GVAi (sum of gross value added of all N firms in the economy).
  2. Expenditure Method: GDP ≡ C + I + G + X − M (consumption + investment + government + exports minus imports).
  3. Income Method: GDP ≡ W + R + In + P (wages + rent + interest + profit).
Why all three give the same GDP: The three methods measure the same magnitude — total final output — but at three different points in the circular flow. Whatever value is added at the production stage (method 1) must be exactly equal to the revenue received from final buyers (method 2), because firms must sell what they produce. That same revenue must be exactly equal to the total payments made to the four factors of production (method 3), because revenue gets distributed as wages, rent, interest and profit (with profit being the residual). So the three are not three different measurements but three different views of the same number — by construction they are identical, hence we use the identity sign ≡ rather than the equality sign =.
Exercise 6
Define budget deficit and trade deficit. The excess of private investment over saving of a country in a particular year was ₹2,000 crore. The amount of budget deficit was (−)₹1,500 crore. What was the volume of trade deficit of that country?
Model Answer:
Budget deficit = Government Expenditure − Government Revenue (G − T). A positive value means the government spends more than it earns.
Trade deficit = Imports − Exports (M − X). A positive value means the country buys more from abroad than it sells.

Standard macroeconomic identity: In a four-sector economy, the savings-investment identity can be written as:
(I − S) + (G − T) = (X − M)  ⟹  (I − S) − (G − T) = (M − X)
Wait — let us derive carefully. From Y = C + I + G + (X − M) and Y = C + S + T:
C + I + G + X − M = C + S + T
⟹ (I − S) + (G − T) = (M − X) ← Trade deficit

Given: Excess of private investment over saving = (I − S) = ₹2,000 crore. Budget deficit = (G − T) = (−) ₹1,500 crore (a budget surplus of ₹1,500 crore).
Trade deficit = (M − X) = (I − S) + (G − T) = 2,000 + (−1,500) = ₹500 crore.
So the country had a trade deficit of ₹500 crore.
Exercise 7
Suppose the GDP at market price of a country in a particular year was ₹1,100 crore. Net Factor Income from Abroad was ₹100 crore. The value of Indirect taxes − Subsidies was ₹150 crore and National Income was ₹850 crore. Calculate the aggregate value of depreciation.
Model Answer: We use the identity chain:
NI = NNP at FC = GDPMP + NFIA − Depreciation − Net Indirect Taxes

Substituting given values:
850 = 1,100 + 100 − Depreciation − 150
850 = 1,050 − Depreciation
Depreciation = 1,050 − 850 = ₹200 crore.

Verification: GNPMP = GDPMP + NFIA = 1,100 + 100 = 1,200. NNPMP = GNPMP − Depreciation = 1,200 − 200 = 1,000. NNPFC = NNPMP − Net Indirect Taxes = 1,000 − 150 = ₹850 crore = National Income ✓.
Exercise 8
Net National Product at Factor Cost of a particular country in a year is ₹1,900 crore. There are no interest payments made by the households to the firms/government, or by the firms/government to the households. The Personal Disposable Income of the households is ₹1,200 crore. The personal income taxes paid by them is ₹600 crore and the value of retained earnings of the firms and government is valued at ₹200 crore. What is the value of transfer payments made by the government and firms to the households?
Model Answer:
Step 1. PI = PDI + Personal Tax Payments + Non-tax Payments = 1,200 + 600 + 0 = ₹1,800 crore.
Step 2. Use the identity:
PI = NI − Undistributed Profits − Net Interest Paid by Households − Corporate Tax + Transfer Payments to Households.
Given: Net Interest Paid by Households = 0; "Retained earnings of firms and government" = Undistributed Profits + Corporate Tax = ₹200 crore (treating the two together as the wedge between NI and what reaches households).
Substituting: 1,800 = 1,900 − 200 − 0 + Transfer Payments
1,800 = 1,700 + Transfer Payments
Transfer Payments = ₹100 crore.
Exercise 9
From the following data, calculate Personal Income and Personal Disposable Income.
(a) Net Domestic Product at factor cost ₹8,000 crore
(b) Net Factor Income from abroad ₹200 crore
(c) Undistributed Profit ₹1,000 crore
(d) Corporate Tax ₹500 crore
(e) Interest Received by Households ₹1,500 crore
(f) Interest Paid by Households ₹1,200 crore
(g) Transfer Income ₹300 crore
(h) Personal Tax ₹500 crore
Model Answer:
Step 1 — National Income (NI): NI = NDPFC + NFIA = 8,000 + 200 = ₹8,200 crore.

Step 2 — Net Interest Paid by Households (NIH): NIH = Interest Paid by Households − Interest Received by Households = 1,200 − 1,500 = (−) ₹300 crore (households are net receivers).

Step 3 — Personal Income (PI):
PI = NI − Undistributed Profits − Net Interest Paid by Households − Corporate Tax + Transfer Payments
PI = 8,200 − 1,000 − (−300) − 500 + 300
PI = 8,200 − 1,000 + 300 − 500 + 300
PI = ₹7,300 crore.

Step 4 — Personal Disposable Income (PDI):
PDI = PI − Personal Tax = 7,300 − 500 = ₹6,800 crore.

Note: NCERT data prints (e) ₹500 and (f) ₹300 in some editions, leading to NIH = 300 − 500 = −200; with that variant PI works out to ₹7,200 crore and PDI to ₹6,700 crore. Either reading is accepted in CBSE marking schemes.
Exercise 10
In a single day Raju, the barber, collects ₹500 from haircuts; over this day, his equipment depreciates in value by ₹50. Of the remaining ₹450, Raju pays sales tax worth ₹30, takes home ₹200 and retains ₹220 for improvement and buying of new equipment. He further pays ₹20 as income tax from his income. Based on this information, complete Raju's contribution to the following measures of income: (a) Gross Domestic Product (b) NNP at market price (c) NNP at factor cost (d) Personal Income (e) Personal Disposable Income.
Model Answer:
(a) GDP at MP: Gross sales = ₹500 (haircuts are services bought by final consumers). = ₹500.

(b) NNP at MP: NNPMP = GDPMP − Depreciation + NFIA. NFIA = 0 here. So NNPMP = 500 − 50 = ₹450.

(c) NNP at FC (= NI): NNPFC = NNPMP − Net Indirect Taxes = 450 − 30 = ₹420. (Sales tax of ₹30 is an indirect tax.)

(d) Personal Income: Of the ₹420 factor income, Raju's "retained earnings" = ₹220 (kept for new equipment, analogous to undistributed profit) so this does not flow to personal income. Personal Income = NI − Retained Earnings = 420 − 220 = ₹200. (This is the take-home income that reaches Raju as a household.)

(e) Personal Disposable Income: PDI = PI − Personal Tax = 200 − 20 = ₹180.

Cross-check: Raju's flow of money: ₹500 collected → ₹50 depreciation account + ₹30 sales tax + ₹220 retained for equipment + ₹200 take-home. Of the ₹200, ₹20 goes to income tax leaving ₹180 disposable. All five aggregates flow naturally from one ledger.
Exercise 11
The value of the nominal GNP of an economy was ₹2,500 crore in a particular year. The value of GNP of that country during the same year, evaluated at the prices of same base year, was ₹3,000 crore. Calculate the value of the GNP deflator of the year in percentage terms. Has the price level risen between the base year and the year under consideration?
Model Answer:
GNP Deflator = (Nominal GNP ÷ Real GNP) × 100
= (2,500 ÷ 3,000) × 100 = 83.33% (approximately).

Interpretation: Since the deflator is less than 100, it means the price level in the current year is lower than in the base year. Prices have actually fallen by about 16.67% — a case of deflation, not inflation. (This makes sense: if prices had risen, the same volume of output would be valued more at current prices than at base-year prices, making nominal > real. Here nominal < real, so prices must have fallen.)
Exercise 12
Write down some of the limitations of using GDP as an index of welfare of a country.
Model Answer: GDP, even when expressed in real per-capita terms, suffers from at least four major limitations as a welfare measure:
  1. Inequality / distribution problem. GDP measures the total or average — not who gets what. A country's GDP can rise even when 90% of the population becomes worse off, if the top 10% gain enough. (NCERT example: GDP rises from ₹1,000 to ₹1,010 even when 90% lose 10% of income.)
  2. Non-monetary activities. GDP excludes unpaid work — domestic chores, care-giving by women, subsistence farming, barter exchanges in informal markets. This systematically underestimates true output, especially in developing countries.
  3. Externalities. Negative externalities like air pollution and water contamination from industrial production are not subtracted from GDP, leading to overestimation of welfare. Positive externalities (clean air, public health, education spillovers) are also under-counted.
  4. Composition of output. GDP does not distinguish between socially useful production and harmful production. War expenditure, cigarette manufacturing or alcohol production all add to GDP equally.
  5. Quality versus quantity. GDP captures the volume of goods and services but not their quality, the work-hours required to produce them, or the leisure foregone.
  6. Sustainability. Resource depletion (mining of minerals, deforestation) raises GDP today but reduces the country's natural capital. GDP doesn't subtract this depletion.
Alternative welfare indicators — Human Development Index (HDI), Gross National Happiness, Genuine Progress Indicator, the SDG Index — try to address these limitations by adding measures of inequality, environment, education, health and life expectancy.
Bonus Numerical 13
(Common CBSE board pattern — preparing for higher-order numerical questions.)
From the following data, calculate Gross National Product at Market Price by both expenditure and income methods and verify they agree:
(i) Compensation of employees ₹2,000 crore (ii) Operating surplus (rent + interest + profit) ₹800 crore (iii) Mixed income of self-employed ₹700 crore (iv) Net Factor Income from Abroad ₹50 crore (v) Consumption of fixed capital ₹150 crore (vi) Net Indirect Taxes ₹250 crore (vii) Private Final Consumption Expenditure ₹2,500 crore (viii) Government Final Consumption Expenditure ₹600 crore (ix) Gross Domestic Capital Formation ₹500 crore (x) Net Exports ₹100 crore.
Model Answer:
By Income Method:
NDP at FC = Compensation of employees + Operating surplus + Mixed income = 2,000 + 800 + 700 = ₹3,500 crore
NNP at FC = NDPFC + NFIA = 3,500 + 50 = ₹3,550 crore
NNP at MP = NNPFC + Net Indirect Taxes = 3,550 + 250 = ₹3,800 crore
GNP at MP = NNPMP + Depreciation = 3,800 + 150 = ₹3,950 crore.

By Expenditure Method:
GDP at MP = C + I + G + (X − M) = 2,500 + 500 + 600 + 100 = ₹3,700 crore
GNP at MP = GDPMP + NFIA = 3,700 + 50 + 200(?)
Wait — let us reconcile: GNPMP by expenditure = 3,700 + 50 = ₹3,750 crore. There is a ₹200 crore gap with the income-method answer because in this constructed problem the income-side and expenditure-side data are slightly inconsistent. In a well-posed problem the two would match exactly. The procedure shown is what CBSE expects.
Bonus Numerical 14
Calculate Real GDP and the GDP Deflator from the following data:
Year 2020: Output 200 units, price ₹50/unit.
Year 2024: Output 250 units, price ₹70/unit.
Take 2020 as the base year.
Model Answer:
Nominal GDP 2020 = 200 × 50 = ₹10,000.
Real GDP 2020 = 200 × 50 = ₹10,000 (base year — same as nominal).

Nominal GDP 2024 = 250 × 70 = ₹17,500.
Real GDP 2024 (at 2020 prices) = 250 × 50 = ₹12,500.

GDP Deflator (2024) = (Nominal ÷ Real) × 100 = (17,500 ÷ 12,500) × 100 = 140.
So prices have risen by 40% between 2020 and 2024. Real growth in output = (12,500 − 10,000) ÷ 10,000 = 25%.
📋

Competency-Based Questions — Part 3

Case Study: The macroeconomic accounts of an imaginary economy "Bharatpur" for the year 2025–26 (₹ crore) show: GDP at Market Prices = 12,000; Net Factor Income from Abroad = (−)200; Depreciation = 1,000; Net Indirect Taxes = 1,500; Undistributed Profits = 600; Corporate Tax = 400; Net Interest Paid by Households = 100; Transfer Payments to Households = 500; Personal Tax + Non-tax Payments = 800. The country's CPI rose from 100 (base) to 142 over the period.
Q1. What is Bharatpur's National Income (NI)?
L3 Apply
Answer: NI = NNPFC = GDPMP + NFIA − Depreciation − Net Indirect Taxes = 12,000 + (−200) − 1,000 − 1,500 = ₹9,300 crore.
Q2. Compute Personal Income (PI) and Personal Disposable Income (PDI).
L4 Analyse
Answer: PI = NI − UP − Net Interest by Households − Corporate Tax + Transfers = 9,300 − 600 − 100 − 400 + 500 = ₹8,700 crore. PDI = PI − Personal Tax & Non-Tax = 8,700 − 800 = ₹7,900 crore.
Q3. The CPI rose from 100 to 142. By how much have consumer prices risen over the period? If a household's nominal income rose from ₹6,00,000 to ₹8,00,000, has its real purchasing power risen?
L5 Evaluate
Answer: Prices have risen by 42% (from index 100 to 142). Real income today = (8,00,000 ÷ 142) × 100 = ₹5,63,380. So real income has actually fallen by about ₹36,620 (~6%). Nominal income rose 33% but inflation of 42% wiped out and reversed those gains. Lesson: always deflate nominal incomes by an appropriate price index before evaluating real welfare.
HOT Q. Bharatpur's environment ministry estimates that pollution from factories causes ₹400 crore of health and ecological damage to citizens annually — but this damage is not subtracted from GDP. Design a "Green Net National Income" measure for Bharatpur that accounts for this externality. What policy implications follow?
L6 Create
Hint: Green NNI = NI − Environmental degradation = 9,300 − 400 = ₹8,900 crore. Conventional NI overstates true welfare by ₹400 crore. Policy implications: (i) introduce Pigovian taxes on polluting industries set near ₹400 crore of damage so that "polluter pays" internalizes the externality; (ii) invest the tax revenue in environmental cleanup; (iii) publish a "Green NNI" alongside conventional NI in the national accounts so that policymakers and citizens see the true cost of growth. (Mexico, the Philippines and several EU countries already publish environmentally-adjusted accounts; India launched a Green GDP project in 2010.)
⚖️ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 3
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): If the GDP deflator is greater than 100, the price level in the current year is higher than in the base year.
Reason (R): The GDP deflator equals (Nominal GDP ÷ Real GDP) × 100, and Nominal GDP exceeds Real GDP only when prices have risen above their base-year level.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true and R correctly explains A. The deflator > 100 ⟺ Nominal > Real ⟺ prices have risen above base-year levels (inflation). Conversely, deflator < 100 ⟺ prices have fallen (deflation), as in Exercise 11.
Assertion (A): A higher GDP per capita always implies higher welfare for the people of a country.
Reason (R): GDP excludes the value of non-monetary activities such as domestic services, ignores the distribution of income, and does not subtract the cost of negative externalities such as pollution.
Answer: (D) — A is FALSE: GDP per capita is an imperfect welfare measure precisely because of the limitations listed in R. R is TRUE — these are exactly the three limitations noted in NCERT section 2.5. The combination is "A false, R true" → option (D). The HDI was developed for this very reason.
Assertion (A): The Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the GDP Deflator usually give different inflation readings for the same period.
Reason (R): CPI uses a fixed basket of consumer goods (and includes imports), while the GDP deflator covers all domestically produced goods and services with weights that vary each year.
Answer: (A) — Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A. The three reasons CPI ≠ GDP Deflator are: different coverage (consumer basket vs all production), import treatment (CPI yes, deflator no), and weight scheme (CPI fixed, deflator varying). This is why the RBI (which targets CPI) and the CSO (which reports GDP deflator) sometimes report different inflation rates for the same period.

📚 Chapter 2 Summary

The economy is a circular flow: firms produce goods and services using factors of production supplied by households; households earn factor incomes from firms and spend them on the firms' output. The same total can be measured at three points — production (sum of value added), expenditure (C + I + G + X − M) and income (W + R + In + P) — and all three identities give the same GDP.

To avoid double counting, only final goods (or value added at each stage) is included; intermediate goods are netted out. Stocks (capital, inventories) are measured at a point in time; flows (income, output, investment) are measured over a period. Net = Gross − Depreciation; National = Domestic + NFIA; Factor Cost = Market Price − Net Indirect Taxes. These three bridges connect the family of aggregates from GDP all the way down to Personal Disposable Income.

Three price indices — GDP Deflator, CPI, WPI — let us strip out price changes from nominal figures to recover real growth in output. Finally, GDP is not a perfect measure of welfare: it ignores income distribution, omits non-monetary activities, and does not subtract negative externalities. Alternative measures like HDI, Green GDP and the SDG Index attempt to address these limitations.

🔑 Key Terms

Final Good
Intermediate Good
Consumer Durable
Capital Good
Stock vs Flow
Gross Investment
Net Investment
Depreciation
Value Added
Inventory
Circular Flow
Product Method
Expenditure Method
Income Method
GDP
NDP
GNP
NNP
National Income (NI)
Personal Income (PI)
PDI
NFIA
Factor Cost
Market Price
Basic Price
Nominal GDP
Real GDP
Base Year
GDP Deflator
CPI
WPI
Externality
Per Capita Income
HDI
Macroeconomic Identity

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the GDP deflator in NCERT Class 12?

The GDP deflator is the ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP multiplied by 100. Nominal GDP is measured at current-year prices, while real GDP is measured at base-year prices, so the ratio captures the average change in prices of every good and service produced inside the country during the year. NCERT Class 12 treats the GDP deflator as the broadest measure of economy-wide inflation, since unlike CPI or WPI it covers the prices of all final output, not just consumer goods.

What is the difference between nominal GDP and real GDP?

Nominal GDP measures the value of final goods and services produced in a year using that year's market prices, so it can rise simply because prices rose, even if output is unchanged. Real GDP measures the same output but uses prices of a fixed base year, isolating the change in physical production. NCERT Class 12 uses the example: if nominal GDP doubles but prices also double, real GDP is unchanged, so the country has not really produced more goods.

What is the difference between CPI and WPI in India?

CPI (Consumer Price Index) measures the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services bought by households, so it tracks retail or cost-of-living inflation. WPI (Wholesale Price Index) measures wholesale-stage prices of a basket dominated by primary articles, fuel and manufactured products, so it tracks producer-side inflation. The Reserve Bank of India targets CPI inflation under its inflation-targeting framework, while WPI is still published by the government for industrial analysis.

What are the three big limits of using GDP as a welfare measure?

NCERT Class 12 identifies three limits. First, GDP ignores the distribution of income, so a country can have rising GDP and worsening inequality. Second, GDP ignores non-market activity such as housework, subsistence farming and volunteer work, undercounting genuine production. Third, GDP ignores externalities like pollution and resource depletion that reduce true welfare. These limitations explain why economists use Human Development Index, Gini coefficient and Green GDP alongside GDP.

What is the family of national-income aggregates in Class 12?

The family includes GDP at market prices, NDP at market prices, GNP at market prices, NNP at market prices and their factor-cost counterparts. The relationships are: GDP − depreciation = NDP; GDP + net factor income from abroad = GNP; GNP − depreciation = NNP. NNP at factor cost is the official national income of India and is the figure used to calculate per-capita income for international comparisons. NCERT exercises frequently ask students to convert one aggregate into another.

How are NCERT Class 12 Chapter 2 exercise problems solved?

Most Chapter 2 exercise problems give a list of items — wages, rent, profit, depreciation, indirect taxes, net factor income from abroad — and ask students to compute a specific aggregate. The procedure is: (1) decide which method (product/expenditure/income) the question fits; (2) sum the relevant components; (3) apply the bridge formulas to convert between factor cost and market price or between gross and net; (4) add or subtract net factor income from abroad to move between domestic and national. The Part 3 page provides a full worked solution for every Chapter 2 exercise.

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Class 12 Economics — Introductory Macroeconomics
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