GDP Formula

The formula to calculate the components of GDP is Y = C + I + G + NX. That stands for: GDP = Consumption + Investment + Government + Net Exports, which are imports minus exports. In 2019,  U.S. GDP was 70% personal consumption, 18% business investment, 17% government spending, and negative 5% net exports. Here’s how the Bureau of Economic Analysis divides U.S. GDP into the four components.

1. Personal Consumption Expenditures

Consumer spending contributes almost 70% of the total United States production. In 2019, that was $13.28 trillion. Note that the figures reported are real GDP. It’s the best way to compare different years. They are rounded to the nearest billion. The BEA sub-divides personal consumption expenditures into goods and services.

Goods

Goods are tangible objects. They are further sub-divided into two even smaller components. The first is durable goods, such as autos and furniture. These are items that have a useful life of three years or more. The second is non-durable goods, such as fuel, food, and clothing. The retailing industry is a critical component of the economy since it delivers all these goods to the consumer.

Durable goods—cars, furniture, large appliancesNon-durable goods—clothing, food, fuelServices—banking, health care, education

Services

Services are paid aid, help, or information. Most are non-tangible, but the BEA also includes commodities that cannot be stored and are consumed when purchased. It contributes 45% of GDP. Thank the expansion in banking and health care. Most services are consumed in the United States because they are difficult to export.  Why does personal consumption make up such a large part of the U.S. economy? America is fortunate to have a large domestic population within an easily accessible geographic location. It’s almost like a huge test market for new products. That advantage means that U.S. businesses have become excellent at knowing what consumers want. 

2. Business Investment

The business investment includes purchases that companies make to produce consumer goods. But not every purchase is counted. If a purchase only replaces an existing item, then it doesn’t add to GDP and isn’t counted. Purchases must go toward creating new consumer goods to be counted. In 2019, business investments were $3.42 trillion. That’s 18% of U.S. GDP. It’s double its recession low of $1.5 trillion in 2009. In 2014, it beat its 2006 peak of $2.3 trillion. The BEA divides business investment into two sub-components: fixed investment and change in private inventory. 

Fixed Investment

Most fixed investment is non-residential investment. That consists primarily of business equipment, such as software, capital goods, and manufacturing equipment. The BEA bases this component on shipment data from the monthly durable goods order report. It’s a good leading economic indicator. A small but important part of non-residential investment is commercial real estate construction. The BEA only counts the new construction that adds to total commercial inventory. Resales aren’t included. The BEA adds them to GDP in the year they were built.  Fixed investment also includes residential construction, which includes new single-family homes, condos, and townhouses. Just like commercial real estate, the BEA doesn’t count housing resales as fixed investments. New home building was $594 billion in 2019 or 3% of GDP. Combined, commercial and residential construction was $1.11 trillion or 5.8% of GDP.

Change in Private Inventory 

The change in private inventory account measures how much companies add to the inventories of the goods they plan to sell. When orders for inventories increase, it means companies receive orders for goods they don’t have in stock. They order more to have enough on hand. It’s important for companies to have enough inventory so they don’t disappoint and turn away potential customers. An increase in private inventories contributes to GDP. A decrease in inventory orders usually means that businesses are seeing demand slack off. As inventories build, companies will cut back on production. If it continues long enough, then layoffs are next. So, the change in private inventories is an important leading indicator, even though it contributed less than 1% of GDP in 2018.

3. Government Spending

Government spending was $3.30 trillion in 2019. That’s 17% of total GDP. It’s less than the 19% it contributed in 2006. In other words, the government was spending more when the economy was booming before the recession. The federal government spent $1.28 trillion in 2019. More than 60% was military spending. State and local government contributions were 11%. Although this spending rose a bit since 2017, other sectors of the economy grew faster.

4. Net Exports of Goods and Services

Imports and exports have opposite effects on GDP. Exports add to GDP and imports subtract. The United States imports more than it exports, creating a trade deficit. America still imports a lot of petroleum, despite gains in domestic shale oil production. Services are difficult to export. In 2019, imports subtracted $3.49 trillion or a little more than in 2018. Exports added $2.53 trillion, about the same as 2017 and 2018. As a result, international trade subtracted $950 billion from GDP, more than $920 billion it subtracted in 2018, and the $859 billion it subtracted in 2017.

Components of Real GDP (2019)