Chapter 18: System of National Accounts and GDP Concepts

📚 JAIIB 2025 • IE & IFS • Module B • Chapter 7 of 8

System of National Accounts & GDP Concepts

How India measures its economic output — GDP/GNP/NDP/NNP, market price vs factor cost, 3 methods of computing GDP, SNA 2008 framework, base year 2011-12, GVA at basic prices, and real vs nominal GDP.

⏱ 18 min read🎯 High Exam Weightage🧠 8 Memory Tricks⚡ 12 Flash Cards

Banky Counts the Whole Country’s Income! 📊

GDP is the number that tells you how rich India is — and every banker needs to understand it. When news says ‘GDP grew 8.7%’ — what does that actually mean? This chapter breaks it all down.

“Sir, GDP, GNP, NDP, NNP, factor cost, market price, basic price, GVA — too many abbreviations! Can’t India just have ONE number?!” 😵
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Section 1 of 9

Why Read This Chapter?

Every credit appraisal references GDP growth — understand it or struggle

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Sir, I process loans — why should I know how GDP is calculated?
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Banky, because every credit assessment references GDP! When your bank appraises a steel company loan, the credit note says ‘steel sector grew 9.9% (GVA).’ When your bank plans its annual targets, it references ‘nominal GDP growth of 19.5%.’ When RBI sets inflation targets, it uses GDP deflator. Understanding GDP variants — real vs nominal, market price vs factor cost, GVA at basic prices — means you can read ANY economic report. Plus the formula GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) is tested in EVERY JAIIB exam!
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Exam Marks

3-5 questions — GDP formula (C+I+G+X-M), factors of production, market price vs factor cost, GDP vs GNP difference (NFIA), base year 2011-12. Formulaic = easy if you know the relationships!

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Career Growth

Economic analysis is core to credit appraisal, risk management, and strategic planning. Understanding GDP = economic literacy

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Real Life

You’ll finally understand what ‘GDP grew 8.7%’ actually means and why ‘higher GDP doesn’t necessarily mean higher welfare’

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Section 2 of 9

How Will It Benefit You?

Real career advantages

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Give me a real scenario!
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📊 Scenario: In a training session, the faculty asks: ‘What’s the difference between GDP at market price and GDP at factor cost?’ While others freeze, you say: ‘GDP at factor cost = GDP at market price minus indirect taxes plus subsidies. Market price is what consumers PAY; factor cost is what producers RECEIVE. The difference is the tax wedge.’ Faculty: ‘Perfect textbook answer!’ 🌟
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Section 3 of 9

What Is This Chapter About?

30-second summary

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Quick version, sir!
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This chapter covers: SNA (System of National Accounts) — UN framework for measuring economic output, India follows SNA 2008, base year 2011-12. 3 methods of computing GDP: Expenditure (C+I+G+X-M), Income (wages+rent+interest+profit), Product/Value Added. Key aggregates: GDP, GNP (=GDP+NFIA), NDP (=GDP-Depreciation), NNP, Factor Cost vs Market Price, GVA at Basic Prices. Real vs Nominal GDP. Per capita income, personal income, disposable income. NSO (merger of NSSO+CSO, May 2019).
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Section 4 of 9

Key Definitions — Banky Asks, Mentor Explains

Every term explained like you’re 10

Critical Term
GDP
Total value of everything produced INSIDE India in one year
C+I+G+(X-M)

Banky’s Understanding: Gross Domestic Product — money value of ALL final goods and services produced within India’s borders during a year. Doesn’t matter if producer is Indian or foreign — if produced on Indian soil, it counts. GDP is an aggregate measure — doesn’t show distribution. Higher GDP ≠ higher welfare (welfare is broader: health, education, sanitation). GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) where C = consumption, I = investment, G = government spending, X-M = net exports.

🧒 Analogy: Like counting EVERYTHING cooked in your kitchen in a year — whether you ate it, your guest ate it, or you sold it to neighbours. If it was cooked in YOUR kitchen = your GDP!
Critical Term
GNP
GDP + income earned by Indians ABROAD (minus foreigners’ income in India)
GDP + NFIA

Banky’s Understanding: Gross National Product = GDP + NFIA (Net Factor Income from Abroad). If an Indian owns a business in USA and earns profit — included in India’s GNP (but USA’s GDP). If a foreigner earns in India — included in India’s GDP but NOT GNP. NFIA = income from abroad minus income paid to foreigners. When NFIA is positive, GNP > GDP.

🧒 Analogy: GDP = what’s produced in your kitchen. GNP = what YOUR family earns, including from a food stall your brother runs in another city, minus rent paid to the kitchen landlord (foreigner).
Critical Term
NDP & NNP
GDP/GNP minus depreciation — the NET value after wear and tear
Minus depreciation

Banky’s Understanding: NDP = GDP – Depreciation. NNP = GNP – Depreciation. Depreciation = wear and tear of machines, equipment, buildings used in production. Gross includes depreciation; Net excludes it. NNP at factor cost is essentially National Income — the income actually available to the nation’s factors of production.

🧒 Analogy: Like your salary: GROSS salary is before deductions, NET salary is what you actually take home. NDP/NNP is the economy’s ‘take-home’ output after accounting for wear and tear of machines!
Critical Term
Factor Cost vs Market Price
Factor cost = what producers get. Market price = what consumers pay.
Tax difference

Banky’s Understanding: Market Price = what consumers pay = includes indirect taxes, minus subsidies. Factor Cost = what producers receive = price of factors (land, labour, capital, entrepreneur) used in production. GDP at FC = GDP at MP – Indirect Taxes + Subsidies. Since 2015, India uses GVA at Basic Prices instead of GDP at factor cost. Factors of production: land (rent), labour (wages), capital (interest), entrepreneur (profit).

🧒 Analogy: A samosa costs ₹15 at the shop (market price). But the shop owner gets only ₹12 after paying ₹3 GST. The ₹12 is ‘factor cost’ — what the factors of production actually received!
Critical Term
GVA at Basic Prices
The new way India measures sectoral GDP — replaced factor cost
Since 2015

Banky’s Understanding: Gross Value Added at Basic Prices — the new measure of economic activities compiled from 2011-12 by NSO, replacing GDP at factor cost. Basic Price = amount receivable by producer minus any tax plus any subsidy on that unit. GDP = GVA at Basic Prices + Net Taxes on Products. Since SNA 2008 adoption (January 30, 2015), India’s headline growth is measured by GDP at constant market prices (international practice), not GDP at factor cost as before.

🧒 Analogy: Like upgrading from marks-based grading (factor cost) to CGPA system (GVA at basic prices) — same concept, more modern and internationally comparable!
Critical Term
Real vs Nominal GDP
Real = adjusted for inflation (true growth). Nominal = includes price changes.
Base year prices

Banky’s Understanding: Nominal GDP (GDP at current prices) = value of output at TODAY’s prices. Can increase just because prices rose (inflation), not because more was produced. Real GDP (GDP at constant prices) = value of output at BASE YEAR prices (2011-12). Removes inflation effect — shows TRUE production growth. GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) × 100. India’s base year: 2011-12 (changed from 2004-05 on January 30, 2015).

🧒 Analogy: Nominal = your salary in current rupees (₹50K today). Real = your salary in ‘old rupees’ — adjusting for how much prices have risen. If salary doubled but prices also doubled, your REAL salary is unchanged!
Critical Term
3 Methods of GDP Computation
Expenditure (spending), Income (earning), Product (producing) — all give same result
3 methods

Banky’s Understanding: GDP can be calculated 3 ways — all give the SAME result (circular flow): (1) Expenditure Method: GDP = C + I + G + (X-M). Total spending by consumers, businesses, government, and net exports. (2) Income Method: Sum of all incomes — compensation of employees + property income + production taxes + depreciation. (3) Product/Value Added Method: Sum of value added in each sector (agriculture + industry + services). In India, we’ve traditionally used the Product method (GDP by sector).

🧒 Analogy: Like measuring water in a circular pipe — you can measure it at the tap (expenditure), at the pump (income), or at the treatment plant (production). Same water, different measurement points!
Critical Term
NSO
National Statistical Office — India’s data agency (merged CSO + NSSO in 2019)
May 2019

Banky’s Understanding: On May 23, 2019, the Indian government merged NSSO (National Sample Survey Organisation) with CSO (Central Statistics Office) to form the National Statistical Office (NSO). Headed by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI). NSO compiles and publishes GDP, national income, and other macro data. It’s the official source for all economic statistics in India.

🧒 Analogy: Like merging two data departments into one super-department — CSO handled national accounts, NSSO did surveys. Now NSO does both under one roof!
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Section 5 of 9

Chapter Explained in Simple Stories

So easy even Banky’s nephew understands

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Sir, explain this like a story!
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Three bite-sized stories coming up — impossible to forget! 🚀

📊 Block 1: GDP and Its Family — The National Income Family Tree

Think of national income aggregates as a family tree:

GDP (Gross Domestic Product): Everything produced INSIDE India. The grandfather of all measures.

GDP + NFIA = GNP: Add Indians’ income from abroad, subtract foreigners’ income from India. GNP = what INDIANS produce (anywhere in the world).

GDP – Depreciation = NDP: Subtract wear and tear of machines. The NET output.

GNP – Depreciation = NNP: Net National Product. NNP at factor cost = NATIONAL INCOME (the most important concept!).

At Market Price vs Factor Cost: Market price includes taxes, factor cost excludes them. GDP at FC = GDP at MP – Indirect Taxes + Subsidies.

Since 2015, India uses GVA at Basic Prices (replacing factor cost) and GDP at constant market prices as the headline measure (replacing GDP at factor cost). Base year: 2011-12.

Key Term
NFIA
Net Factor Income from Abroad = income earned by Indians abroad MINUS income earned by foreigners in India. Add NFIA to GDP to get GNP. If NFIA is positive, GNP > GDP.
🧑‍💼 Banky: “So GDP is the grandfather, GNP adds foreign income, NDP subtracts depreciation, and NNP at FC = National Income? It’s a family! 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦”

🧮 Block 2: Three Ways to Count India’s Money

There are 3 methods to calculate GDP — and all three give the SAME answer (because the economy is circular):

💳 Method 1 — Expenditure: Add up ALL spending. GDP = C + I + G + (X-M). C = consumer spending (food, clothes, phones). I = business investment (factories, machines). G = government spending (salaries, defence, infra). X-M = exports minus imports.

💰 Method 2 — Income: Add up ALL earnings. Compensation of employees (wages/salaries) + Property income (rent/interest/profits) + Taxes on production + Depreciation.

🏭 Method 3 — Product/Value Added: Add up value added in EACH sector. Agriculture value added + Industry value added + Services value added. This is what India traditionally uses — GDP by sector.

All three = same GDP. It’s like measuring a circle’s circumference from different starting points — you always get the same number!

Key Term
Factors of Production
4 factors: Land (earns rent), Labour (earns wages), Capital (earns interest), Entrepreneur (earns profit). These are what ‘factor cost’ pays for!
🧑‍💼 Banky: “GDP = C+I+G+(X-M) — this formula is like the banker’s E=mc². I’ll NEVER forget it! 🧮”

📈 Block 3: Real vs Nominal — Don’t Let Inflation Fool You!

This is the most important distinction in GDP analysis:

Nominal GDP (current prices): Today’s output × today’s prices. If nominal GDP grew 15%, is that good? Maybe — or maybe prices just rose 12% and real output only grew 3%. Nominal GDP includes inflation’s distortion.

Real GDP (constant prices, base year 2011-12): Today’s output × BASE YEAR prices. Strips out inflation. Shows TRUE production growth. If real GDP grew 8.7% — that means the economy ACTUALLY produced 8.7% more stuff.

GDP Deflator = (Nominal / Real) × 100. If deflator = 120, prices have risen 20% since base year.

India changed its base year from 2004-05 to 2011-12 on January 30, 2015, adopting SNA 2008 framework. The headline measure is now GDP at constant market prices (not factor cost as before). GVA at basic prices replaced GDP at factor cost for sectoral analysis.

Key Term
Base Year 2011-12
India’s current GDP base year = 2011-12 (changed from 2004-05 on Jan 30, 2015). All ‘real GDP’ figures use 2011-12 prices as reference. Base years are revised every 5 years per NSC recommendation.
🧑‍💼 Banky: “So if nominal GDP grows 15% but inflation is 12%, real growth is only 3%? Inflation is a sneaky thief stealing GDP growth! 🕵️”
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Section 6 of 9

Exam Angle — Every Testable Point

All facts, numbers, definitions JAIIB tests

✅ Must-Know Facts — Highest Probability

  • GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) — Consumption + Investment + Govt spending + Net Exports
  • C includes: food, housing, medical, rent | I includes: machines, factories, new houses (NOT financial products)
  • G includes: public servant salaries, military, govt investment | Does NOT include transfer payments (social security)
  • Factors of production: Land (rent), Labour (wages), Capital (interest), Entrepreneur (profit)
  • GDP at factor cost = GDP at market price – Indirect taxes + Subsidies
  • Market price = economic price (what consumers pay) | Factor cost = what producers receive
  • GNP = GDP + NFIA (Net Factor Income from Abroad)
  • NDP = GDP – Depreciation | NNP = GNP – Depreciation
  • NNP at factor cost = NATIONAL INCOME
  • Real GDP = GDP at constant prices (base year prices) — removes inflation, shows true growth
  • Nominal GDP = GDP at current prices — includes inflation distortion
  • GDP Deflator = (Nominal GDP / Real GDP) × 100
  • India’s GDP base year: 2011-12 (changed from 2004-05 on January 30, 2015)
  • SNA 2008 framework adopted — headline measure now GDP at constant MARKET prices (not factor cost)
  • GVA at Basic Prices replaced GDP at factor cost for sectoral measurement (since 2015)
  • GDP = GVA at Basic Prices + Net Taxes on Products
  • 3 methods of GDP computation: Expenditure, Income, Product/Value Added — all give same result
  • NSO formed May 23, 2019 — merger of CSO + NSSO — under MoSPI
  • Personal Disposable Income = Personal Income – Personal Taxes – Direct Taxes – Fines/Fees
  • Higher GDP does NOT necessarily mean higher welfare — welfare is wider concept

📝 Previous Year Questions

Q: Personal consumption expenditures divided into:
A: (d) All — durable goods, non-durable goods, services ✅
Q: Factors of production are:
A: (c) Land, Labour, Capital and Entrepreneur ✅
Q: Market price is also called:
A: (b) Economic price ✅
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Section 7 of 9

Memory Tricks That STICK

Lock every fact permanently

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Too many facts! Help! 🤯
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These tricks will lock everything in forever! 🧲

🧠 Trick 1 — GDP Formula

C + I + G + (X-M)
CIGXM = C-I-G-net eXports-iMports ‘CIG smokes eXtra Menthol!’ 🚬
GDP = C (consumption) + I (investment) + G (government) + (X-M) (exports minus imports). Remember: CIG + XM. Investment does NOT include financial products — only physical capital!

🧠 Trick 2 — GDP to GNP

Add NFIA
GDP + NFIA = GNP Domestic + National Factor Income = National Product!
To go from Domestic (GDP) to National (GNP), add Net Factor Income from Abroad. NFIA = Indian income abroad minus foreign income in India. D→N = add NFIA.

🧠 Trick 3 — Gross to Net

Subtract Depreciation
GROSS – Depreciation = NET GDP – D = NDP GNP – D = NNP (D for Depreciation!)
To go from Gross to Net: subtract Depreciation (wear and tear). GDP→NDP and GNP→NNP. Think: ‘Gross salary minus deductions = Net salary.’ Same logic!

🧠 Trick 4 — MP to FC

Market Price to Factor Cost
FC = MP – Taxes + Subsidies ‘Factory Cost = Market Price minus Tax, plus Subsidy’
Factor Cost = Market Price – Indirect Taxes + Subsidies. Taxes inflate the price (consumer pays more), subsidies reduce it. Remove taxes, add back subsidies = what factors actually receive.

🧠 Trick 5 — Real vs Nominal

Constant vs Current prices
REAL = REALITY (true growth) NOMINAL = NAME only (inflated!) Real uses BASE YEAR prices
Real GDP removes inflation — shows true production growth. Nominal GDP includes inflation — can be misleading. Real = reality. Nominal = in name only. Base year: 2011-12.

🧠 Trick 6 — Base Year Change

2004-05 → 2011-12 on Jan 30, 2015
Base: 2011-12 (current) Changed: January 30, 2015 Framework: SNA 2008
India changed GDP base year from 2004-05 to 2011-12 on January 30, 2015. Also adopted SNA 2008 framework. Now uses GVA at basic prices and GDP at market prices as headline. 3 changes in 1 revision!

🧠 Trick 7 — 4 Factors = LLCE

Land, Labour, Capital, Entrepreneur
LLCE = Land, Labour, Capital, Entrepreneur They earn: Rent, Wages, Interest, Profit (RWIP!)
4 factors: Land→Rent, Labour→Wages, Capital→Interest, Entrepreneur→Profit. LLCE earns RWIP. Factor COST = the total of RWIP payments. This is what ‘at factor cost’ means!

🧠 Trick 8 — NSO = CSO + NSSO

Merged May 23, 2019
NSO = New Single Office = CSO + NSSO merged May 23, 2019 | Under MoSPI
National Statistical Office formed by merging Central Statistics Office + National Sample Survey Organisation on May 23, 2019. Under Ministry of Statistics (MoSPI). One office for all economic data!
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Section 8 of 9

Visual Summary — Chapter Map

Entire chapter in one diagram

National Accounts & GDP — Chapter 18 Map GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) + NFIA = GNP GDP + Net Factor Income from Abroad Indian income abroad – Foreign income in India – Depreciation = NDP/NNP Gross → Net = subtract wear & tear NNP at FC = NATIONAL INCOME MP → FC conversion FC = MP – Indirect Tax + Subsidy Since 2015: GVA at Basic Prices instead 📊 3 METHODS (all give same result!) Expenditure (C+I+G+XM) | Income (wages+profit) | Product (sector value added) 📈 REAL vs NOMINAL GDP Real = constant prices (true growth) | Nominal = current (includes inflation) Base Year: 2011-12 | SNA 2008 | NSO (CSO+NSSO merged May 2019) | GDP at Market Price = new headline bankerbro.com/ • JAIIB IE&IFS Chapter 18 • Module B
Section 9 of 9

Flash Revision — Last-Minute Cards

Read these 10 minutes before exam

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EXAM IN 15 MINUTES! 😰
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12 cards — read twice, you’ll get every question right! 💪
GDP Formula
C + I + G + (X-M)
Consumption + Investment + Govt + Net Exports
GNP
GDP + NFIA
Net Factor Income from Abroad | Domestic → National
NDP / NNP
GDP/GNP minus Depreciation
Gross → Net = subtract wear & tear
Factor Cost
Market Price – Indirect Taxes + Subsidies
What producers receive (not what consumers pay)
4 Factors of Production
Land, Labour, Capital, Entrepreneur
Earn: Rent, Wages, Interest, Profit (RWIP)
Real GDP
At constant (base year) prices
Removes inflation | Shows TRUE growth
Nominal GDP
At current prices
Includes inflation | Can be misleading
GDP Deflator
(Nominal / Real) × 100
Measures overall price level change
Base Year
2011-12 (changed Jan 30, 2015)
From 2004-05 | Adopted SNA 2008 framework
GVA at Basic Prices
Replaced GDP at Factor Cost
Sectoral measurement since 2015
NSO
CSO + NSSO merged (May 23, 2019)
Under MoSPI | India’s official data agency
GDP ≠ Welfare
Higher GDP doesn’t mean higher welfare
Welfare is wider: health, education, sanitation

⚡ Chapter 18 Complete — System of National Accounts and GDP Concepts

  • GDP = C + I + G + (X-M) — the most important formula in economics!
  • GNP = GDP + NFIA | NDP = GDP – Depreciation | NNP = GNP – Depreciation
  • Factor Cost = Market Price – Indirect Taxes + Subsidies — what producers receive
  • 4 Factors: Land (Rent), Labour (Wages), Capital (Interest), Entrepreneur (Profit)
  • Real GDP = constant prices (removes inflation) | Nominal = current prices (includes inflation)
  • Base year: 2011-12 (changed from 2004-05 on Jan 30, 2015 — SNA 2008 adopted)
  • GVA at Basic Prices replaced GDP at Factor Cost | GDP at market prices = new headline
  • 3 methods: Expenditure (C+I+G+XM), Income (wages+rent+profit), Product (value added by sector)
  • NSO = CSO + NSSO merged May 23, 2019 | Higher GDP ≠ higher welfare

Banky says: “GDP = C+I+G+(X-M), add NFIA = GNP, subtract depreciation = NDP. I’m a GDP expert now!” 🎉📊

You now know every GDP variant, every formula, every method. When the RBI report says ‘GVA at basic prices grew 7.2%’ — you’ll know exactly what that means and why it matters for your bank! 💪

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