ECN 204 Chapter Notes - Chapter 8: Annual Percentage Rate, Demographic Transition, Allocative Efficiency

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Economists define and measure economic growth as either: an increase in real gdp occurring over some time period, an increase in real gdp per capita occurring over some time period. This method is much superior, the real gdp may be big but in contrast the real gdp per capita may be smaller, therefore this method is more accurate: real gdp per capita = real gdp/population. Real gdp in canada was . 6 billion in 2013 and . 2 billon in 2014. Percentage change in growth = [(2014 real gdp 2013 real gdp)/2013 gdp] x100 = Real gdp in canada was . 6 billion in 2013 and population was 35. 3 million. In 2014, real gdp per capita rose to ,941. Canada"s rate of growth of real gdp per capita for 2014: [(48,941-,315)/,315] x. Growth is a widely held economic goal. The expansion of total output relative to population results in rising wages and incomes and thus far higher standards of living.

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