Intermediate Good: Definition and Examples

What Is an Intermediate Good?

An intermediate good is a product used to produce a final good or finished product—also referred to as a consumer good. Intermediate goods—like salt—can also be finished products, since it is consumed directly by consumers and used by producers to manufacture other food products.

Intermediate goods are sold between industries for resale or the production of other goods. These goods are also called semi-finished products because they are used as inputs to become part of the finished product.

Key Takeaways

  • Intermediate goods are products that are used in the production process to make other goods, which are ultimately sold to consumers.
  • Intermediate goods are sold industry-to-industry for resale or to produce other products.
  • Intermediate goods are typically used directly by a producer, sold to another company to make another intermediary good, or sold to another company to make a finished product.
  • When calculating gross domestic product (GDP), economists use the value-added approach with intermediate goods to guarantee that they are not counted twice—once when purchased, and once when the final good is sold.
Intermediate Good: A product used to produce a final good or finished product.

Investopedia / Zoe Hansen

How Intermediate Goods Work

Intermediate goods are vital to the production process, which is why they are also called producer goods. Industries sell these goods to each other for resale or to produce other goods. When they are used in the production process, they are transformed into another state.

There are typically three options for the use of intermediate goods:

  • A producer may make and use their own intermediate goods.
  • The producer may also produce the goods and then sell them, which is a highly common practice between industries.
  • Companies buy intermediate goods for specific use in creating either a secondary intermediate product or in producing the finished good.

Inevitably, all intermediate goods are either a component of the final product or completely reconfigured during the production process.

Intermediate Goods Example

Consider a farmer who grows wheat. The farmer sells his crop to a miller for $100, giving the farmer $100 in value. The miller breaks down the wheat to make flour, a secondary intermediate good. The miller sells the flour to a baker for $200 and creates $100 in value ($200 sale - $100 purchase = $100). The final good, which is sold directly to the consumer, is the bread. The baker sells all of it for $300, adding another $100 of value ($300 - $200 = $100). The final price at which the bread is sold is equal to the value that is added at each stage in the production process ($100 + $100 + $100).

Services can also be intermediate, as in the case of a photographer—the photography is the intermediate service, while the photographs are the final product.

Intermediate Goods vs. Consumer and Capital Goods

Intermediate goods can be used in production, but they can also be consumer goods. How it is classified depends on who buys it.

If a consumer buys a bag of sugar to use at home, it is a consumer good. But if a manufacturer purchases sugar to use during the production of another product, it becomes an intermediate good.

Capital goods, on the other hand, are assets that are used in the production of consumer goods. That means they are purchased to help in the production process. So the baker who bakes the bread in the example above will buy an oven to use in the production process. That oven is considered a capital good, which doesn’t transform or change shape, unlike the wheat.

Intermediate Goods and Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

Economists do not factor intermediate goods when they calculate gross domestic product (GDP). GDP is a measurement of the market value of all final goods and services produced in the economy. The reason why these goods are not part of the calculation is that they would be counted twice.

So if a confectioner buys sugar to add it to her candy, it can only be counted once—when the candy is sold, rather than when she buys the sugar for production. This is called a value-added approach because it values every stage of production involved in producing a final good.

Special Considerations

There are many intermediate goods that can be used for multiple purposes. Steel is an example of an intermediate good. It can be used in the construction of homes, cars, bridges, planes, and countless other products. Wood is used to make flooring and furniture, glass is used in the production of windows and eyeglasses, and precious metals like gold and silver are used to make decorations, housing fixtures, and jewelry.

What Are Other Names for Intermediate Goods?

Intermediate goods are also called semi-finished products, because they are used as inputs to become part of a finished product, or producer goods, because they are vital to the production process.

What Are Some Examples of Intermediate Goods?

Examples of intermediate goods include flour, precious metals, salt, steel, sugar, wheat, and wood.

What Intermediate Goods Does the United States Export?

Examples of intermediate goods exported by the United States include corn, non-monetary gold, soybeans, and wheat.

The Bottom Line

Intermediate goods are products used in production to make other goods, which are ultimately sold to consumers. Intermediate goods are sold industry-to-industry for resale or to produce other products.

Article Sources
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  1. U.S. Census Bureau. “U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, March 2024.”

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