Gross metropolitan product
Gross metropolitan product (GMP) is a monetary measure of the value of all final goods and services produced within a metropolitan statistical area during a specified period (e.g., a quarter, a year). GMP estimates are commonly used to compare the relative economic performance among such areas.
United States
GMP is calculated annually by the Bureau of Economic Analysis within the United States Department of Commerce.[1] This is done only for metropolitan areas and not for micropolitan areas, metropolitan divisions and combined statistical areas, and BEA economic areas.[2]
gollark: However, good luck getting GPUs for that.
gollark: EleutherAI are releasing their 20-billion-parameter model in about a week.
gollark: It's proprietary.
gollark: You can't run it.
gollark: How else would it do it? All is to large language models.
See also
- List of metropolitan areas in the European Union by GDP
- List of metropolitan areas in the United States by GMP
References
- Honolulu economy 51st largest in U.S. September 25, 2009. Pacific Business News
- Regional Economic Accounts October 15, 2012. Bureau of Economic Analysis
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