Actual | Previous | |
---|---|---|
Quarter over Quarter | 1.71% | -0.59% |
Year over Year | 1.45% | -2.87% |
Highlights
GDP growth also rebounded strongly in year-over-year terms, largely reflecting the base effect of weakness twelve months earlier when Taiwan's economy was impacted by high numbers of domestic Covid-19 cases and lockdowns in many major mainland Chinese cities. GDP rose 1.45 percent on the year in the three months to June after falling 2.87 percent in the three months to March. Stronger year-over-year growth was largely driven by consumer spending, outweighing ongoing weakness in investment and exports.
Definition
Gross domestic product (GDP) can be measured using three approaches, namely the production, income and expenditure approaches. The production measure of GDP is derived from firm level data and estimates the value added by all producing industries in the Taiwan economy. The income measure of GDP is derived from earnings data and estimates how the income earned from these producing industries is then distributed throughout the economy as returns to labor, capital and government. The expenditure measure of GDP is derived from data estimating spending on goods and services by final end users and includes consumption, investment and exports minus the value of imports.