- National income aggregates are classified as Domestic/National, Gross/Net, and Market Price/Factor Cost, giving 8 aggregates.
- GDP relates to production within domestic territory, while GNP includes net factor income from abroad.
- Gross includes depreciation; Net is obtained after deducting depreciation.
- Market Price includes indirect taxes; Factor Cost is obtained by subtracting net indirect taxes.
- National Income = NNP at Factor Cost (NNPFC) and is the best measure for comparing income levels.
Definitions [3]
Classical Definitions: National Income
- "The labour and capital of a country acting on its natural resources produce annually a certain net aggregate of commodities, material and immaterial, including services of all kinds. This is the true net annual income or revenue of the country or national dividend." - Marshall
- "National income is that part of the objective income of the community, including of course income derived from abroad, which can be measured in money." - Pigou
- "The national dividend or income consists solely of services as received by ultimate consumers, whether from their material or from their human environments. Thus, a piano or an overcoat made for me this year is not a part of this year's income, but an addition to capital. Only the services rendered to me during this year by these things are income." - Fisher
Modern Definitions: National Income
- "National income estimate measures the value of commodities and services turned out during a given period, counted without duplication." - N.I.C. of India
- "National income is the sum of wages, rent, interest and profit or the sum of all goods and services produced by the economy during one income period." - Shapiro
‘Circular Flow of Income’ - Define.
- The circular flow of income is a model of an economy showing connections between different sectors of an economy.
- It shows flows of income, goods and services, and factors of production between economic agents such as firms, households, government, and nations.
- The circular flow analysis is the basis of national accounts and macroeconomics.
Key Points
Key Points: Domestic Income
- Income earned within a country by residents and non-residents.
- It is a geographical concept.
Relation:
-
Domestic Income = National Income − Net Factor Income from Abroad
Key Points: National Income Aggregates
Key Points: Significance or Importance of National Income
- Measures standard of living and economic welfare
- Shows inflationary & deflationary trends
- Explains economic structure (sector-wise contribution)
- Basis for economic planning and policy
- Helps in budget, taxation & borrowing policies
- Guides consumption–investment decisions
- Shows income distribution
- Helps in centre–state grants allocation
- Useful in international comparisons & quotas
- Important for analysing problems of underdeveloped countries
Key Points: Circular Flow of Income
- It shows the continuous flow of income, output and expenditure in an economy
- Production → Income → Expenditure → Production (repeats continuously)
- Households supply factor services and receive wages, rent, interest, profit
- Firms produce goods/services and receive expenditure from households
- Involves two flows: Real flow (goods & factor services) and Money flow (payments)
- Buyer’s expenditure = seller’s income
Key Points: Circular Flow in a Closed Economy
Key Points: Circular flow and the Equality between Production, Income and Expenditure
- Equality: Value of production = income earned = expenditure made in an economy.
- Reason: Firms produce goods → pay income to households → households spend this income.
- Leakages: Withdrawals from the flow – savings, taxes, imports.
- Injections: Additions to the flow – investment, government spending, exports.
- Condition: Circular flow continues smoothly when leakages = injections.
Key Points: Circular Flow in an Open Economy
Key Points: Economic Sectors of an Economy
- Household Sector: Owns factors (land, labour, capital), earns income, spends on goods/services, saves and pays taxes.
- Business/Firm Sector: Hires factors, produces goods/services, sells to households, government, and abroad.
- Government Sector: Collects taxes, buys goods and factor services, provides public services (education, health, defence).
- Foreign Sector (Rest of the World): Involves exports, imports, and cross-border factor services.
Key Points: Two-Sector Model Without Savings and Investment
- Economy has only households and firms; no government, no foreign trade.
- Households supply factors (land, labour, capital) to firms and get income (wages, rent, interest, profit).
- Firms produce goods/services and sell them to households; households spend all income on consumption.
- Circular flow is constant:
Production = Income = Expenditure
Firms’ income = Households’ expenditure
Households’ income = Firms’ factor payments
Key Points: Two-Sector Model with Savings and Investment
- Economy has households and firms, plus capital (financial) market.
- Households save part of income → saving (S) = leakage from circular flow.
- Firms invest in capital goods → investment (I) = injection into circular flow.
- Savings flow from households to firms through financial institutions.
Equilibrium condition:
-
S = I → circular flow remains stable.
Disequilibrium:
- S > I → income falls.
- I > S → income rises.
Key Points: Three-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
Key Points: Four-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
Key Points: Significance or Importance of Circular Flow of Income
- Shows interdependence of households, firms, government and foreign sector.
- Helps in measuring national income through income, output and expenditure flows.
- Explains macroeconomic equilibrium (e.g. S = I, leakages = injections).
- Identifies leakages (saving, taxes, imports) and injections (investment, govt. spending, exports).
- Helps study disequilibrium and ways to restore balance.
- Useful for monetary policy and fiscal policy analysis.
- Highlights importance of macro variables like income, consumption, saving and investment.
Concepts [14]
- Concept of National Income
- Domestic Income
- National Income Aggregates
- Significance or Importance of National Income
- Circular Flow of Income
- Circular Flow in a Closed Economy
- Circular flow and the Equality between Production, Income and Expenditure
- Circular Flow in a Open Economy
- Economic Sectors of an Economy
- Two-Sector Model without Savings and Investment
- Two-Sector Model with Savings and Investment
- Three-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
- Four-Sector Model of Circular Flow of Income
- Significance or Importance of Circular Flow of Income
