Question:

What are Final Goods?

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GDP counts final goods (or value added), never adds intermediate values repeatedly.
Updated On: Nov 5, 2025
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Solution and Explanation

Distinction: Intermediate goods are purchased for use as inputs (e.g., flour used by a bakery), whereas final goods are ready for consumption or investment (bread bought by a household; an oven bought by a bakery).
Accounting rule: National income/GDP includes only final goods' value, or alternatively sums value added at each stage, to prevent counting the same value multiple times.
Examples: A car sold to a consumer is final; tyres sold to the car company are intermediate, but the tyre sold as a replacement to a household is final.
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