: In macroeconomics, GDP can be calculated through different methods. GDP(E) refers specifically to the Expenditure Approach , which sums up all final spending in the economy, including consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports.
| Code | Description | Adjustment | Use Case | |------|-------------|------------|----------| | | Constant prices (2015), chain-linked, SCA, million national currency | Real growth analysis, Q-on-Q comparisons | | | GDP A21 | Current prices (nominal), not adjusted | Measuring total economic size at today’s prices | | | GDP C101 | Constant prices, previous year’s prices | More accurate for very recent periods (avoids base-year drift) | | | GDP M30 | Per capita, PPS (Purchasing Power Standards) | Comparing living standards across countries | | | GDP V200 | Volume index (2015 = 100) | Visualizing growth trends without units | |
The value of a nation's exports minus its imports.
* Source : European Commission, Eurostat A methodological note can be found in the report or here. * SPRING 2010 REFORM BAROMETER- BusinessEurope
You can access the full report and related datasets via the UN DESA Publications portal. E-Government Survey 2024 - DESA Publications
: Monitor how governance arrangements and implementation strategies specifically drive GDP growth in middle-income countries (MICs). 3. Governance & Equity Integrator
Investment isn't just about capital; it’s about a country's ability to negotiate based on its macroeconomic growth and geopolitical stability. The China-U.S. Impact:
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