How It Works
The Department of Commerce releases GDP data for the U.S. economy on a quarterly basis at 8:30 am EST on the last business day of the next quarter.
The equation used to calculate GDP is as follows:
GDP = Consumption + Government Expenditures + Investment + Exports - Imports
The components used to calculate GDP include:
Consumption:
Durable goods (items expected to last more than three years)
Nondurable goods (food and clothing)
Services
Government Expenditures:
Defense
Roads
Schools
Investment Spending:
Nonresidential (spending on plants and equipment), Residential (single-family and multi-family homes)
Business inventories
Net Exports:
Exports are added to GDP
Imports are deducted from GDP
The GDP report also includes information regarding inflation:
The implicit price deflator measures changes in prices and spending patterns.
The fixed-weight price deflator measures price changes for a fixed basket of over 5,000 goods and services.
GDP is calculated both in current dollars and in constant dollars. Current Dollar GDP involves calculating economic activity in present-day dollars. This, however, makes time period comparisons difficult due to the effects of inflation. By comparison, Constant Dollar GDP factors out the impact of inflation and allows for easy comparisons by converting the value of the dollar in other time periods to present-day dollars.