Úr þjóðarbúskapnum - 01.06.1962, Qupperneq 34

Úr þjóðarbúskapnum - 01.06.1962, Qupperneq 34
ÚR ÞJÓÐARBÚSKAPNUM end of the period. In the following the most important results shown by the tables will be pointed out. Private consumption was maintained, with slight variations, at about 75 per cent of GNP for the first years up to 1951. From then on this percentage decreased up to 1957 but from that year reached a certain stability at about 65 to 66 per cent of GNP. Tliis structural change amounting to about 10 per cent of GNP, occurring through some six to eight years, must be considered as quite consider- able. To some extent this trend may perhaps be looked at as a beleted post-war return to pre-war structures. Indications are to the effect that this proportion was also 65 per cent in the year 1938. But this is only based on a very rough calcutation which cannot ben taken as definitive. The private consumption figures do include change in stocks other than that accounted for in line 4, that is other than change in stocks of export products and livestock. All changes in the inventories should indeed be included in line 4. But data on these changes are very scanty and do not permit of any- thing more than informed guesses. Full corr- ections for the change in stocks would prob- ably somewhat even out the year to year oscillations in consumption, but the trend result over the whole period is not likely to be affected as the latest years of the high con- sumption percentage were also years of low and decreasing stocks of consumption goods. i i Public consumption has been a very stable percentage of gross national product for the whole period. At highest it is 9.7 per cent and at lowest 8.6 per cent of GNP. This per- centage is lowest both at the beginning and the end of the period. Gross domestic fixed capital formation is dealt with in a separate article which does not carry a summary in English, although the 32 tables are furnished with English text. The present review is intended also as a comm- entary to these special tables on capital forma- tion. Leaving the year 1945 out of the comparison, the gross capital formation was highest as a proportion of GNP at the beginning and the end of the period, but lowest during the years 1949 to 1951. If these relations are viewed against the background of the ratio of total expenditure to total production, it is seen that the first years are a special case. The gross capital formation for these years, 1946 and 1947, was just about 27 per cent of GNP. At the same time national expenditure was just about 12 per cent and 14 per cent in excess of GNP. For all the other years of the period that difference stayed within 6 per cent but most often about 3 per cent. The gross capital formation reached a minimun both in a relative and absolute sense in 1950, then 19 per cent of GNP. Since then it has been steadily increasing. The percentage of GNP has most often been about 26 to 27 per cent, although it reached 29.5 per cent in 1960 when the importation of fishing boats and vessels was exceptionally great. Change in stocks of export products and in livestock is a relatively small item. The change is calculated by multiplying the quantitative changes by the respective unit market prices at the end of each year. This valuation implies that the export premiums have not been taken into account. In this way the change in stocks of export products is treated in a like manner as exports. National expenditure is the sum of the above four component items. The relation of tlris total to the national product shows how much has been used or disposed of by the nation in excess of current production. The differ- ence is determined by the amounts of total imports and total exports of goods and ser- vices, including the interest due on capital
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