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Gross Domestic Product

If you throw all the products we buy and the services we use in one basket, then add up the price tag, that's the Gross Domestic Product, which is the primary metric economists use to assess the economic health of a country or region.

The easy part of calculating GDP is the calculation itself: C+I+G+(X-M)=GDP. Got it? No? Well, add Consumption, Investment by companies, Government purchases, and then take the product of eXports (calling it 'E' would lack sexiness) minus iMports ('I' was taken). Viola! GDP.

Still don't get it? Well, knowing the components helps. Consumption is the biggest component, and it's a tally of the cost of all the goods and services we buy. Investment is what companies spend on the real assets they own, plus the value of the inventory that we haven't gobbled up through consumption. Government purchases are what the Feds pay money for (whether it be highways or fighter jets, though big social programs, like welfare, aren't counted). And then we calculate the difference between the goods and services we¿re sending to other countries and the stuff we're bringing in.

Good. That explains it, except there's a catch. Inflation has a habit of distorting the numbers, so economists talk about either Nominal GDP or Real GDP. In fact, Real GDP isn't necessarily "real" for most folks, since it takes any inflation out. Nominal GDP includes the effects of inflation. (There's something called the implicit price deflator which is a calculation using the two, but we'll spare you the details.)

So, now that we know GDP, why do we want to? Well, it's good to compare different markets. And watching the trend shows whether a given economy is growing (good), stagnating (not so good), or shrinking (very not so good). When GDP goes down two quarters in a row, we're officially in a recession.

For the record, GDP is released at the end of each month, with most reporting ¿preliminary¿ data for the previous month. But you won't get final GDP numbers for the fourth quarter of a year until the very end of the first quarter of the next year. After all, it's not an easy number to calculate.

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CORRECTING and REPLACING Wired.com Launches WIRED Biz Small Business Program

 
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NEW YORK, Aug 08, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) ----Please replace the release dated August 5, 2008 with the following corrected version due to multiple revisions.

The correct release reads as follows:

WIRED.COM LAUNCHES WIRED BIZ SMALL BUSINESS PROGRAM

WIRED has partnered with Brother International Corporation to introduce WIRED Biz - a destination site created to benefit a community of entrepreneurs and small business owners. WIRED Biz will immerse users in Web 2.0 solutions to enhance creativity, provide a platform for information sharing, and most notably, encourage collaborative problem solving through a Crowdsourcing experiment.

WIRED Biz will launch on August 4, 2008 and will be curated by WIRED Contributing Editor, and author of the upcoming book, "Crowdsourcing," Jeff Howe. The site will feature exclusive video of Jeff Howe offering advice on how to put his Crowdsourcing theory to work for small businesses.

"We're excited to be partnering with Brother to bring real solutions to this segment of the Wired community," said Wired.com Associate Publisher, Josh Stinchcomb.

Within WIRED Biz, lives The Small Business Program. This unique program will engage the competitive nature of the audience by allowing them to determine the most world-changing small businesses as submitted by the community. The Program also allows users to share their small business challenges and, by utilizing the intelligence of the crowd, collectively find solutions. From the pool of entrants, WIRED will select five finalists based on how closely they align with the WIRED tenet of affecting global change through innovation. The five finalists will be video interviewed and, through proprietary reddit voting technology, users will decide the winner. The Program winner will be announced in January and will receive national exposure in a custom ad in WIRED magazine.

Visit wired.com/smallbizprogram.

SOURCE: WIRED

WIRED Jenna Landry, 212-286-6877 jenna_landry@wired.com 
Copyright Business Wire 2008
 
 

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