Rising damp: why nominal GDP is so flat
If your interest is in how fast the economy's growing (or not growing), the answer is real GDP - GDP after allowing for the effect of inflation. But if your interest is in how fast the federal government's tax receipts are growing the answer is nominal GDP - GDP before allowing for inflation.
Why is nominal the right answer for tax receipts? Because, as Treasurer Wayne Swan keeps saying, "we live in the nominal economy through the prices we pay and the incomes we earn". As part of this, the income tax we pay is based on our nominal income and the indirect taxes we pay are based on our nominal spending.
Fine. If you didn't know the growth in nominal GDP is the best guide to the growth in tax revenue before, you do now. But why has Swan been making so much of this in recent days? Because it's the main reason why, despite all his savings measures (and creative accounting), the government won't be able to keep the promise it made in the 2010 election campaign to get the budget back to surplus this financial year.
That promise was based on a Treasury projection for 2012-13 included in the 2010-11 budget. But tax collections simply haven't grown as strongly as Treasury projected they would, and the main reason they haven't is that nominal GDP has been behaving strangely.
We're used to assuming that, if the economy's growing in real terms (which it has been), the government's tax revenue will be growing at least as fast and probably faster. (Why faster? Because almost half the feds' tax collections come from personal income tax, which grows extra strongly because, in the absence of the indexation of tax brackets, it's subject to "bracket creep".)
When economic events are proceeding normally, the distinction between nominal and real GDP doesn't matter much. Obviously, the difference between nominal and real GDP is the inflation rate, and if inflation is running within the Reserve Bank's 2 per cent to 3 per cent target range, the two totals should be moving pretty much in parallel.
To put it another way, nominal GDP should be growing at a reasonably steady 2.5 percentage points or so faster than real GDP. But we learnt from last week's national accounts for the December quarter that, for the first time on record, the past three consecutive quarters have seen nominal grow by less than real, not more. Since real GDP grew by 1.9 per cent, nominal GDP should have grown by about 4 per cent. Instead it grew by a pathetic 1.6 per cent.
Swan noted in a recent speech to business economists that nominal has grown by less than real for only four short periods in the 53 years since the Bureau of Statistics began producing quarterly national accounts.
The last time nominal was really weak was in the global financial crisis. Before that it was the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 and, before that, the Menzies government's credit squeeze in 1961. In all but the credit squeeze episode, the explanation was the same: a sharp fall in global commodity prices led to a sharp deterioration in our "terms of trade" - the prices we receive for our exports relative to the prices we pay for our imports.
Ah. Whenever we talk of inflation, people think automatically of the main measure of inflation we use, the consumer price index. But in fact there are many measures of inflation, most of the others being derived from the national accounts.
The difference between nominal and real GDP is measured not by the CPI but by the "implicit price deflator" for GDP. When the economy's travelling normally, there shouldn't be much difference between the GDP deflator and the CPI and other measures of the change in the price of domestic spending.
But "normal" means when our terms of trade aren't changing much. When they're improving or deteriorating sharply, the GDP deflator and measures of domestic-spending inflation really part company.
Why? Because domestic spending includes the prices of imports but excludes the prices of exports, whereas GDP and its deflator exclude the prices of imports but include the prices of exports.
It works out that nominal GDP will grow very much faster than real GDP when our terms of trade are improving sharply, but nominal may even grow more slowly than real when our terms of trade are deteriorating sharply - as they were last year. But why wasn't Treasury expecting
the terms of trade to deteriorate and allowing for this in its projections of tax revenue? It was, and it has been - for most of the past decade, in fact. But it wasn't budgeting for the deterioration to be as fast as it's been, particularly in the September quarter.
That was the first problem with its revenue forecasts. The second, less obvious, one was this: on the basis of past behaviour, Treasury (and everyone else) was expecting any deterioration in the terms of trade to be accompanied by a similar fall in the exchange rate.
To everyone's surprise, the dollar has stayed up. This means the prices of imports haven't risen in the way you'd have expected, causing domestic inflation to be lower than expected. This, in turn, has meant nominal incomes haven't risen as fast as could have been expected.
So this factor, too, helps explain why tax collections haven't risen as fast as forecast. The latest estimate is that tax collections will fall about $10 billion short of what was forecast in the budget last May.
The last thing to say is that by no means all federal taxes are closely aligned with nominal GDP. The strongest relationship is with taxes on profits - company tax, income tax on unincorporated businesses and the two resource rent taxes. These account for about a third of total tax revenue.
Twitter: @1RossGittins
Frequently Asked Questions about this Article…
Nominal GDP measures the value of goods and services at current prices (includes inflation), while real GDP adjusts for inflation to show true output growth. Everyday investors watch real GDP to gauge how fast the economy is growing in volume terms, but nominal GDP matters for things like tax receipts and government revenue because taxes are collected on nominal incomes and spending.
Nominal GDP is the best guide to how fast tax receipts will grow because personal and indirect taxes are based on nominal incomes and spending. If nominal GDP is weak, tax collections grow less than expected, which can make it harder for a government to achieve budget surplus targets.
The article explains nominal GDP has been unusually flat because our terms of trade deteriorated sharply (export prices fell relative to import prices) and the exchange rate stayed high. That kept import prices — and therefore domestic inflation and nominal incomes — lower than expected. For investors, weak nominal GDP can mean slower growth in corporate earnings and tax-funded government spending than forecast.
The GDP deflator (implicit price deflator) measures the price change for everything included in GDP and is the difference between nominal and real GDP. The CPI measures consumer prices. When terms of trade are stable, the GDP deflator and CPI move similarly, but they can diverge when export or import prices shift — which directly affects nominal GDP.
When our terms of trade improve (export prices rise relative to import prices), nominal GDP tends to grow faster than real GDP; when terms of trade deteriorate, nominal GDP can grow more slowly than real GDP. Normally a weaker terms of trade would lead to a lower exchange rate, pushing up import prices and domestic inflation, but this time the dollar stayed high, keeping domestic inflation and nominal incomes lower and reducing tax revenue.
According to the article, the latest estimate is that tax collections will be about $10 billion short of what was forecast in last May’s budget, largely because nominal GDP and nominal incomes haven’t risen as expected.
The taxes most strongly linked to nominal GDP are taxes on profits — including company tax, income tax on unincorporated businesses — and the two resource rent taxes. Together these account for about one-third of total federal tax revenue.
Yes, but it’s rare. The article notes nominal has grown less than real only a few short times in the past 53 years. Previous episodes of weak nominal GDP occurred around the global financial crisis and the Asian financial crisis (1997–98), typically driven by sharp falls in global commodity prices that worsened our terms of trade.

