Glossary of Financial & Economic Terms

 

     
   

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Abnormal profit

Abnormal returns

Accelerator effect

Accelerated supply

Accord and satisfaction

Accounting cost

Account (Allocated) gold

Account (Certificate) gold

Account (unallocated) gold

Accredited investor

Accrual bond

Active management

Activist shareholder

Adaptive expectations

Advance premium forward

Adverse selection

Aggregate demand

Aggregate expenditure

Aggregate supply

Allotment (financial)

Alpha (investment)

American option

Angel investors

Annual report

Annuity

Anonymous banking

Anticipation (finance)

Antidumping

Arbitrage

Arbitrage pricing theory

Arbitristas

Argentine currency board

Arrovian uncertainty

Art finance

Asian financial crisis

Asian option

Asset pricing

Asset specific required rtn

Asset-based economy

Assignment

At-the-money (moneyness)

Auction call

Audit

Austrian school/economics

Autarky

Automatic stabilizer

Autonomous consumption

Average cost

 

 

Aggregate expenditure

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Aggregate expenditure is a measures of national income, very similar to GDP. It is defined as the total value of annual goods and services production within a country (at market prices) counting only goods and services actually bought.

The Aggregate expenditure, like GDP, includes exports at currency exchange rates (logically, since exports must have been paid for). This is called Net Export Expenditure (export minus import expenditure).

If a country's economy produces more goods than are sold, the increase in inventory would generally be included in the GDP figure, but excluded from Aggregate expenditure, which measures only those goods and services produced and actually purchased.

If an economy is in macroequilibrium aggregate output (measured by GDP) and aggregate expenditure will be equal. (Mainstream microeconomic theories imply that GDP and Aggregate expenditure will be close in real economies because inventory surpluses aren't sustainable at fixed prices. See also: Say's law.) Infact, if the inventory level in the supply sector is static, the GDP and Aggregate expenditure numbers should, theoretically, be identical. (In practise, different measuring methods would create small discrepencies.)

Aggregate expenditure is focused on the demand side of the economy, and is more commonly used by modern macroeconomic theorists than GDP.

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggregate_expenditure

 

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