Stocks and flows have different units and are thus not
commensurable – they cannot be meaningfully
compared, equated, added, or subtracted. However, one may meaningfully take
ratios of stocks and flows, or multiply or divide them. This is a point of some confusion for some economics students, as some confuse taking ratios (valid) with comparing (invalid). The ratio of a stock over a flow has units of (units)/(units/time) = time. For example, the
debt to GDP ratio has units of years (as GDP is measured in, for example, dollars per year whereas debt is measured in dollars), which yields the interpretation of the debt to GDP ratio as "number of years to pay off all debt, assuming all GDP devoted to debt repayment". The ratio of a flow to a stock has units 1/time. For example, the
velocity of money is defined as
nominal GDP / nominal
money supply; it has units of (dollars / year) / dollars = 1/year. In
discrete time, the change in a stock variable from one point in time to another point in time one time unit later (the
first difference of the stock) is equal to the corresponding flow variable per unit of time. For example, if a country's stock of
physical capital on January 1, 2010 is 20 machines and on January 1, 2011 is 23 machines, then the flow of
net investment during 2010 was 3 machines per year. If it then has 27 machines on January 1, 2012, the flow of net investment during 2010 and 2011 averaged 3 \tfrac{1}{2} machines per year. In
continuous time, the
time derivative of a stock variable is a flow variable. ==More general uses==