GDP & Growth
GDP, output gap, potential output, real growth, nominal growth, per-capita output, and annualized growth terms.
GDP, income, output, growth, productivity, and national-account terms used in finance analysis.
Output, Income, and Growth covers GDP, output, income, expenditure, growth rates, national product, and income-distribution measures used in finance and macro analysis.
Use these pages when economic activity, income growth, expenditure components, or output measures affect forecasts, valuation assumptions, fiscal capacity, credit quality, or market expectations. It sits inside Economics, so readers can move up when the broader economics context matters.
This landing page points readers toward GDP, Output, and Growth Measures, Macro Policy, Stability, and Fiscal Ratios, and National Income, Consumption, and Expenditure. Choose the narrower page when the term changes the evidence source, calculation, institution, market convention, risk exposure, or decision being made.
| Area | Use it for |
|---|---|
| GDP, Output, and Growth Measures | GDP, output gap, potential output, real growth, nominal growth, per-capita output, and annualized growth terms. |
| Macro Policy, Stability, and Fiscal Ratios | Macroeconomic policy, economic stability, diversification, and fiscal-ratio terms used in country and sovereign analysis. |
| National Income, Consumption, and Expenditure | National income, consumption, disposable income, GNP, factor income, aggregate demand, and expenditure-accounting terms. |
Output and income material is educational and does not provide investment, tax, or policy advice.
Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.
GDP, output gap, potential output, real growth, nominal growth, per-capita output, and annualized growth terms.
Macroeconomic policy, economic stability, diversification, and fiscal-ratio terms used in country and sovereign analysis.
National income, consumption, disposable income, GNP, factor income, aggregate demand, and expenditure-accounting terms.