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Economics

Circular Flow of Income and National Income Accounting

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Matthew Williams
|May 17, 2026|9 min read
Circular FlowCSEC EconomicsGDPGNPNational IncomeNominal GDPPaper 01Paper 02Real GDPSection 6

The two, three, and four-sector circular flow of income, leakages and injections, equilibrium conditions, GDP and GNP definitions, three methods of calculating national income, nominal versus real GDP, and uses of national income statistics.

The circular flow model shows how money moves around an economy through spending, income, and production. National income accounting puts numbers on that flow. Together, they form the foundation for understanding how economists measure the size and health of an economy.

The Circular Flow of Income

Two-Sector Model

In the simplest model, the economy has only two groups: households and firms.

  • Households own the factors of production (land, labour, capital, enterprise) and supply them to firms.
  • Firms use those factors to produce goods and services, paying households rent, wages, interest, and profit in return.
  • Households spend their income on the goods and services firms produce.

This creates a continuous loop. Money flows from firms to households as factor payments, and from households back to firms as expenditure on goods and services.

In this two-sector model, with no saving and no spending outside the loop:

Income (Y)=Output (Q)=Expenditure (AE)\text{Income (Y)} = \text{Output (Q)} = \text{Expenditure (AE)}Income (Y)=Output (Q)=Expenditure (AE)

This is why there are three ways to measure national income — they all measure the same circular flow from different angles.

Including Leakages and Injections

Once we allow households to save and firms to invest, the simple loop breaks:

  • Savings (S) — income earned but not spent — leak out of the consumption flow.
  • Investment (I) — firms borrow and spend on new capital — inject money back in.

Equilibrium in the two-sector model requires:

S=IS = IS=I

If saving exceeds investment, total expenditure is less than output; firms see unsold stock and cut production. If investment exceeds saving, demand exceeds output and production rises until they equalise.

Three-Sector Model (Including Government)

Adding government introduces two more flows:

  • Taxation (T) — a leakage from household income to government.
  • Government spending (G) — an injection of funds back into the economy.

Aggregate expenditure becomes:

AE=C+I+G=YAE = C + I + G = YAE=C+I+G=Y

Equilibrium using the injection-leakage approach:

I+G=S+TI + G = S + TI+G=S+T

Investment and government spending together must equal saving and taxation together. Even if firms invest less than households save, the economy stays in equilibrium if government spending exceeds taxation by the same gap (a budget deficit).

Four-Sector Model (Including the Foreign Sector)

Adding the foreign sector completes the model:

  • Imports (M) — money leaves the domestic economy (a leakage).
  • Exports (X) — money enters from abroad (an injection).

Aggregate expenditure:

AE=C+I+G+(X−M)=YAE = C + I + G + (X - M) = YAE=C+I+G+(X−M)=Y

Equilibrium:

S+T+M=I+G+XS + T + M = I + G + XS+T+M=I+G+X

All leakages (saving, taxation, imports) must equal all injections (investment, government spending, exports).

Exam Tip

The four-sector equilibrium condition S+T+M=I+G+XS + T + M = I + G + XS+T+M=I+G+X is frequently tested in Paper 02. If three of the six values are given, you can calculate the fourth. Rearrange: X−M=S−I+T−GX - M = S - I + T - GX−M=S−I+T−G to find the trade balance if given saving, investment, and fiscal balances.

National Income Accounting

National income is the total money value of goods and services produced in an economy over a given period, usually one year.

Key Concepts

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is the total market value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders during a year, regardless of who owns the factors of production.

Gross National Product (GNP) is the total market value of all final goods and services produced by the nationals (residents) of a country, whether produced domestically or abroad.

GNP=GDP+Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)GNP = GDP + \text{Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)}GNP=GDP+Net Factor Income from Abroad (NFIA)

NFIA is the difference between income earned by the country's nationals abroad and income earned by foreigners within the country.

Net National Product (NNP) is GNP minus depreciation (capital consumption).

NNP=GNP−DepreciationNNP = GNP - \text{Depreciation}NNP=GNP−Depreciation

NNP is equivalent to National Income (NI).

Remember

GDP focuses on where production occurs (within the borders). GNP focuses on who owns the factors (nationals of the country). For a small Caribbean country with many citizens working abroad, GNP may be noticeably larger than GDP because of remittances.

The Three Methods of Calculating GDP

All three methods should yield the same result — they measure the same flow at different points in the circular flow.

1. The Expenditure Method

Adds up all spending on final goods and services:

GDP=C+I+G+(X−M)GDP = C + I + G + (X - M)GDP=C+I+G+(X−M)

Where:

  • CCC = household consumption
  • III = investment (business spending on new capital, including changes in inventories)
  • GGG = government spending on goods and services (excludes transfer payments like pensions)
  • X−MX - MX−M = net exports (exports minus imports)

2. The Income Method

Adds up all factor incomes earned in production:

GDP=Wages+Rent+Interest+ProfitGDP = \text{Wages} + \text{Rent} + \text{Interest} + \text{Profit}GDP=Wages+Rent+Interest+Profit

Adjustments: add indirect taxes, subtract subsidies to move from factor cost to market prices. Transfer payments (pensions, unemployment benefits) are excluded because they do not represent payment for current production.

3. The Output (Value-Added) Method

Adds up the value added at each stage of production across all industries. Value added = value of output at each stage minus cost of inputs purchased from other firms.

This method avoids double counting — counting the value of intermediate goods (inputs) more than once.

Example

A simple value-added chain:

StageSelling priceInput costValue added
Farmer (sugar cane)$1,000$0$1,000
Factory (bagasse)$3,000$1,000$2,000
Carpenter (boards)$5,000$3,000$2,000
Furniture maker$8,000$5,000$3,000
Retail store$12,000$8,000$4,000
Total GDP contribution$12,000

The total of value added ($12,000) equals the final selling price — confirming there is no double counting.

GDP at Market Price vs Factor Cost

GDP at market price includes indirect taxes but has not deducted subsidies.

GDP at factor cost reflects what producers actually receive:

GDPfactor cost=GDPmarket price−Indirect taxes+SubsidiesGDP_{\text{factor cost}} = GDP_{\text{market price}} - \text{Indirect taxes} + \text{Subsidies}GDPfactor cost​=GDPmarket price​−Indirect taxes+Subsidies

Nominal vs Real GDP

Nominal GDP measures output at current prices. It rises when either the physical quantity of goods produced rises or when prices rise.

Real GDP adjusts for inflation by measuring output at the prices of a fixed base year. Real GDP rises only when the actual quantity of goods and services increases.

Real GDP=Nominal GDPPrice Index×100\text{Real GDP} = \frac{\text{Nominal GDP}}{\text{Price Index}} \times 100Real GDP=Price IndexNominal GDP​×100
Example
YearNominal GDPPrice Index (base = 2015)Real GDP
2015$200m100$200m
2016$250m106$235.8m
2017$320m110$290.9m
2018$345m114$302.6m
2019$400m118$338.9m

Real GDP = Nominal GDP ÷ Price Index × 100

For 2016: 250m÷106×100=250m ÷ 106 × 100 = 250m÷106×100=235.8m

Even though nominal GDP rose from 200mto200m to 200mto250m, part of that increase was inflation. Real growth was only from 200mto200m to 200mto235.8m.

Potential GDP is the maximum output an economy can sustain without causing inflation — the level achievable when all resources are fully and efficiently employed. If actual GDP falls below potential GDP, the economy has a negative output gap and is operating inefficiently.

Nominal vs Real Output Growth

Nominal output growth is the percentage change in nominal GDP. Real output growth is the percentage change in real GDP. Only real output growth represents an actual improvement in the economy's productive capacity and living standards.

Uses of National Income Statistics

  • Measuring economic growth over time
  • International comparisons of living standards
  • Informing government fiscal and monetary policy decisions
  • Identifying sectors of the economy that are growing or contracting
  • Tracking changes in income distribution
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