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Net Material Product (NMP) was the mainmacroeconomic indicator used for monitoringgrowth innational accounts ofsocialist countries during theSoviet era. These countries included the USSR and all theComecon members. NMP is the conceptual equivalent ofGross Domestic Product (GDP) in theUnited Nations System of National Accounts, although numerically the two measures are calculated differently.
NMP is calculated for thematerial production sectors only, and excludes most of the service sectors, which are part of GDP. The material production sectors include manufacturing industries, agriculture and forestry, construction, wholesale and retail trade, supply of material inputs, road maintenance, freight transport (but not passenger transport), communication and information services supporting material production, and other material production activities. It is calculated by subtracting the value of all production costs (including the cost of material inputs, depreciation, and labor in production) from the value of output produced in the material production sectors.
For comparison with GDP, it is necessary to add back to NMP the value of fixed asset depreciation (which is not subtracted in GDP calculations) and the total value of all services classified as "non-productive" in the socialist system of national accounts (which are part of GDP). These "non-productive" services include health care, education, housing, public utilities, consumer services, communication in the non-productive sector, passenger transport, financial services (banking, credit, insurance), government services, the defense establishment, and social organizations. The tax components subtracted in the calculation of GDP should also be added back to obtain NMP.
The economic term that corresponds to Net Material Product inRussian is Национальный доход (literally: national income). None of the accepted meanings ofnational income in English matches the meaning in Russian, and Net Material Product was introduced into English usage as the best alternative.
GDP began to be calculated in theUSSR in 1988, based essentially on theUnited Nations System of National Accounts. The table compares the new GDP estimates with the traditional NMP numbers (in billions of current rubles). GDP is seen to be 25%–30% higher than NMP due to depreciation and the "non-productive" service sectors included in GDP but not in NMP.
| Indicator | 1980 | 1985 | 1990 |
|---|---|---|---|
| GDP | 619 | 777 | 1000 |
| NMP | 462.2 | 578.5 | 700.6 |
| NMP in % of GDP | 75 | 74 | 70 |
Change in NMP (in constant prices) 1980–1990 (in percent of 1980)
| Indicator | Bulgaria | Cuba | Czecho- Slovakia | East Germany | Hungary | Mongolia | Poland | Romania | Vietnam | USSR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NMP in 1990 (1980=100) | 141 | 143 | 117 | 139 | 112 | 156 | 108 | 144 | 153 | 127 |