Difference between revisions of "National income"

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(Personal Income)
(Personal Income)
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== Personal Income ==
 
== Personal Income ==
'''Personal income''' (PI), [[microeconomic]]ally speaking, is the money income received by households and individuals before personal income taxes are subtracted, and disposable income (DI) is personal income less personal income taxes.
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Macro-economic definition: ''Personal income''' (PI), is the money income received by households and individuals before personal income taxes are subtracted, and disposable income (DI) is personal income less personal income taxes.
  
Personal income in the aggregate ([[macroeconomic]]ally speaking) of all individuals typically resolves itself in a non-[[recession]]ary year around 92%-94% of GDP annually, the remainder being infrastructure improvements, buildings, inventories, and other durable goods or savings.
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Macro-economic definition: Personal income in the aggregate of all individuals typically resolves itself in a non-[[recession]]ary year around 92%-94% of GDP annually, the remainder of GDP being infrastructure improvements, buildings, inventories, and other durable goods or savings. In the macro-economic definition of personal income, taxes are not subtracted.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 21:04, December 17, 2018

National income (NI) is the sum of income earned by the factors of production owned by a country's citizens. It includes wages, salaries, and fringe benefits paid for labor services, rent paid for the use of land and buildings, interest paid for the use of money, and profits received for the use of capital resources. It is basically the same as GDP.

Personal Income

Macro-economic definition: Personal income' (PI), is the money income received by households and individuals before personal income taxes are subtracted, and disposable income (DI) is personal income less personal income taxes.

Macro-economic definition: Personal income in the aggregate of all individuals typically resolves itself in a non-recessionary year around 92%-94% of GDP annually, the remainder of GDP being infrastructure improvements, buildings, inventories, and other durable goods or savings. In the macro-economic definition of personal income, taxes are not subtracted.

See also

GDP