Nominal value is the value of anything expressed in money of the day, versus real value which removes the effect of inflation. An example in terms of currency is constant Dollars. Often real value will be expressed as a number in real terms.
In economics, the distinction between nominal and real value is often made. It corresponds to the distinction between money and inflation-corrected numbers.
Nominal numbers - such as nominal wages, interest rates and gross domestic product (GDP) - refer to amounts that are paid or earned in money terms. A paycheck shows money wage and a car loan agreement indicates the nominal interest rate. Nominal GDP refers to the amount of money spent to buy the production of a country.
Real numbers - real wages, interest rates, and GDP - are corrected for the effects of inflation. They indicate the value of these numbers in terms of the purchasing power of wages, interest, or total production. That is, they try to estimate how many goods and services a wage, an interest payment, or total domestic income will buy.
Recently, the US has adapted a new method of measuring inflation using chained values instead of a base year, see consumer price index.
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