Comparing GVA & GDP – UPSC Economics Smart-Prep
GS III • Prelims • National Income Accounting
1. What is GVA?
Gross Value Added (GVA) measures the value addition by each sector/firm in the economy. It is calculated as:
GVA = Output – Intermediate ConsumptionGVA tells us how much value each sector (agriculture, industry, services) contributes to the economy. It is the most useful measure for assessing:
- sector-wise growth
- productivity
- structural changes
- contribution to total output
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2. What is GDP?
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measures the total final value of goods & services produced within the country. It includes the impact of taxes and subsidies on production.
GDP = GVA + (Taxes – Subsidies)GDP is the most widely used macroeconomic indicator for:
- overall economic performance
- international comparison
- fiscal planning
- growth measurement
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3. Relationship Between GVA & GDP
graph TB A[GVA]:::root --> B[Add Taxes]:::node A --> C[Subtract Subsidies]:::node B --> D[GDP]:::node2 C --> D classDef root fill:#D4EFDF,stroke:#1E8449,color:#145A32; classDef node fill:#EBF5FB,stroke:#2874A6,color:#1B4F72; classDef node2 fill:#FDEDEC,stroke:#B03A2E,color:#7B241C;
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4. Key Differences Between GVA & GDP
| Parameter | GVA | GDP |
|---|---|---|
| Meaning | Value added by producers | Market value of final goods/services |
| Focus | Production side | Expenditure/market side |
| Formula | Output – Intermediate consumption | GVA + (Taxes – Subsidies) |
| Used For | Sector-wise analysis | Overall economic growth |
| Data Released By | CSO/MoSPI (sectoral) | CSO/MoSPI (macro) |
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5. Why India Shifted to GVA for Sectoral Analysis
Since 2015, India adopted GVA as a key measure because it:
- captures actual production more accurately
- reduces distortion due to indirect tax changes (GST, excise revisions)
- gives a clearer picture of agriculture, industry, manufacturing, services
- is globally recognized for sector-level accounting
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6. When Does GDP Differ Greatly From GVA?
GDP ≠ GVA mainly when indirect taxes/subsidies change sharply.
- GST increase → GDP rises even if GVA stable
- Subsidy increase → GDP falls
- Excise duty cuts lower GDP but production unchanged
graph TB A[High Taxes]:::node --> B[GDP Up]:::node2 C[High Subsidies]:::node --> D[GDP Down]:::node2 E[GVA]:::root --> F[Unaffected by tax changes]:::note classDef root fill:#D4EFDF,stroke:#1E8449,color:#145A32; classDef node fill:#EBF5FB,stroke:#2874A6,color:#1B4F72; classDef node2 fill:#FDEDEC,stroke:#B03A2E,color:#7B241C; classDef note fill:#F5F6F7,stroke:#B3B6B7,color:#424949;
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7. Smart Summary Table
| Aspect | GVA | GDP |
|---|---|---|
| Concept | Production | Market Value |
| Focus | Sector-wise | Economy-wide |
| Sensitive To | Actual output | Tax/subsidy changes |
| Formula | Output – Intermediate | GVA + Taxes – Subsidies |
| Best For | Structural analysis | Growth comparisons |
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8. Final One-Page Diagram (Exam Revision)
graph TB A[GVA]:::root --> B[Add Taxes]:::node A --> C[Minus Subsidies]:::node B --> D[GDP]:::node2 C --> D classDef root fill:#D4EFDF,stroke:#1E8449,color:#145A32; classDef node fill:#EBF5FB,stroke:#2874A6,color:#1B4F72; classDef node2 fill:#ABEBC6,stroke:#148F77,color:#0E6251;
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