What is Gross Value Added (GVA)?

Short Answer

GVA measures the value a company creates by subtracting intermediate consumption (purchases of goods and services) from total revenue — it's the firm-level equivalent of GDP contribution.

Full Explanation

Gross Value Added is a fundamental measure in economics and productivity analysis. At the firm level, GVA = Revenue minus Intermediate Consumption (the cost of bought-in goods, services, and materials). The resulting figure represents the value that the company itself creates through its own labour, capital, and productivity. GVA is then distributed across employee compensation, gross operating surplus (profit), and taxes on production. GVA is more meaningful than revenue for productivity analysis because it strips out the pass-through costs that don't represent genuine value creation. A company with £10M revenue but £8M in bought-in costs has a GVA of only £2M, while another with £5M revenue and £1M costs has a GVA of £4M — the second company is creating more value despite lower headline revenue. Opagio's Productivity Calculator uses GVA as the output measure in its growth accounting framework.

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Related Glossary Terms

Growth Accounting

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