Compendium admissions 2023-25



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PI Prep Kit 2023
Fixed Cost:

A fixed cost is an expense that is required to pay that is generally time-related. A great example of a fixed cost is a corporation’s monthly rent for office space and/or manufacturing facilities.
Variable Cost: Variable costs are determined by a company's output volume. For example, ABC manufacturers may have to spend $10 to produce one unit of goods. As a result, if the firm receives a huge purchase order during a particular month, its monthly expenses will increase proportionally.



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Gross Domestic Product

GDP is the total monetary or market worth of all completed products and services produced within a country's boundaries in a certain period. It is a complete assessment of a country's economic health since it is a wide measure of domestic production. GDP is generally estimated on an annual basis, although it is also calculated every quarter. A country's GDP is calculated by considering all private and public consumption, government expenditures, investments, additions to private inventories, paid-in building expenses, and the international trade balance. When the entire value of products and services sold by local producers to foreign nations surpasses the total value of foreign goods and services purchased by domestic consumers, a country's GDP rises. A country is considered to have a trade surplus when this circumstance happens. A trade imbalance happens when domestic consumers spend on foreign items exceeds the total amount of money that domestic companies may sell to international customers.


Types of GDP
Nominal GDP: Nominal GDP is a measure of economic output in an economy that takes current prices into account. In other words, it does not account for inflation or the rate at which prices rise, which might exaggerate the growth statistic. All products and services counted in nominal GDP are evaluated at the prices at which they are actually sold that year. When comparing various quarters of output within the same year, nominal GDP is utilised. When comparing two or more years' GDP, real GDP is utilised.
Real GDP: Real GDP is an inflation-adjusted measure of an economy's output in a particular year, with prices maintained constant from year to year to isolate the influence of inflation or deflation from the trend in output overtime. GDP is prone to inflation since it depends on the monetary worth of goods and services. Rising prices tend to boost a country's GDP, but this may not always represent changes in the number or quality of products and services provided. Thus, merely looking at an economy's nominal GDP might make


33 it impossible to identify whether the figure has climbed due to a genuine increase in output or simply because prices have risen.

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