What Is Gross Domestic Product (GDP)?

Gross Domestic Product, or GDP, is a measurement of economic output. It’s the total value of all the finished goods and services produced within a country, region, or industry during a specified time, usually a year or a quarter. GDP helps measure economic health and growth.

What is GDP?

A simple way to define Gross Domestic Product is to break down the three words making up the term:

  • Gross is the total market value of how much goods and services cost in the marketplace.
  • Domestic refers to the country or home of the economic output.
  • Products are the goods (things made) and services (actions provided) purchased by end-users.

Put together, GDP is the total market value of all the goods and services produced within a country’s borders during a year.

Economists calculate GDP using four inputs:

  1. Personal Consumption Expenditures: Total consumer spending on goods and services such as food, entertainment, and medical bills.
  2. Investment: Business spending on fixed assets such as land, buildings, and equipment. This category also includes unsold business inventory and homes purchased by consumers.
  3. Government Spending: The money spent by federal, state, and local governments on goods and services such as education, infrastructure, and defense.
  4. Net Exports: The value of exports minus imports.

The formula for calculating GDP uses the underlined letters from above:

C + I + G + NX = GDP

Why is GDP important?

GDP is a crucial measure of economic health. Rising GDP shows that an economy is expanding. It implies that consumers aren’t worried about their jobs, so they spend more money on goods and services. Businesses, meanwhile, continue to expand because they see opportunities to increase profits.

However, slowing GDP growth or a decline can suggest that the economy is heading toward or has fallen into a recession. That can cause consumers to reduce spending as they worry about job security. It can also cause businesses to reduce their investment levels.

Public policymakers, from legislators to central bankers, use GDP as a guide to determine policy moves. For example, Parliament could pass legislation to spur economic growth if GDP shows the economy is in a downturn. Likewise, the Bank of Canada will look to GDP as one of many inputs of economic health when determining whether to reduce or increase the overnight rate.

How investors can use GDP

The economy moves in a four-part cycle:

  1. Expansion: A period of sustained GDP growth.
  2. Peak: A time of slowing GDP growth.
  3. Contraction or recession: A time of negative GDP growth.
  4. Trough: A brief period where GDP stops declining and starts to recover.

Many industries are susceptible to changes in economic or GDP growth. For example, consumer spending on items such as airline tickets, hotel stays, restaurants, cars, clothing, and consumer products rises when the economy expands and falls when it’s contracting. Companies involved in economically sensitive industries usually see their earnings and stock prices rise and fall with the economic cycle. Investors call economically sensitive companies cyclical stocks.

Given their nature, investors can use GDP as their guide for when to buy and sell cyclical stocks. The best time to buy cyclical stocks is during the trough phase and the early stages of an expansion. Investors should avoid or sell cyclical stocks when GDP growth is slowing. Investors can use GDP to maximize returns and minimize losses in cyclical stocks.

How fast is Canada’s GDP growing?

By current measures — not very fast at all.

Canada measures its GDP growth by collecting data from Statistics Canada, private industry sources, and federal and provincial government departments. Every quarter Statistics Canada will release information on GDP growth from the previous three months.

Statistics Canada’s latest release came in late February 2023 and encompassed its fourth quarter and 2022 annual estimates for GDP. The report showed that GDP was flat in the final three months of 2022. In fact, GDP contracted slightly from November to December by roughly 0.1%.

The GDP report hints that the Bank of Canada’s interest hiking campaign has successfully slowed Canada’s economy. The report also suggests that investors consider positioning their portfolios for a potential downturn. Possible moves could include reducing exposure to cyclical stocks and increasing investment in more safe stocks that aren’t as reliant on the economy to drive their growth.