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C2ER Monthly Webinar Series June 19, 2012

This webinar series discusses the uses and methodology of the Cost of Living Index. It explores how businesses and communities can utilize the index for decision-making and economic assessments. Presented by industry experts from JonesLangLaSalle, Kiplingers, Greater Memphis Chamber, and SE Louisiana University Business Center.

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C2ER Monthly Webinar Series June 19, 2012

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  1. The Cost of Living Index: Applications for Business and Community C2ER Monthly Webinar Series June 19, 2012

  2. Today’s Presentations Module Topic • Cost of Living Index • Business Uses • Community Uses • Academic Uses • Introduction • Methodology • JonesLangLaSalle • Kiplingers • Greater Memphis Chamber • SE Louisiana University Business Center

  3. Introduction – Cost of Living Index • Published by Council for Community and Economic Research • Published Continuously Since 1968 •  Three Quarters per Year • Participants’ Input/Community Volunteers

  4. What is the Cost of Living Index? • Measure of relative price differences among urban areas • Designed for professional and managerial households in the top income quintile • Prices are collected at a specified time, in strict conformance with standard specifications

  5. Our Methodology • C2ER Does Not Believe that End Users are Well-Served Unless Methodology is Understood • Data Collection Practices • Formulas • Average Prices Used • Technical Advisory Board

  6. Items by Categories

  7. A Specific Standard of Living • Designed for a Specific Standard of Living • For first 30 Years, it was a ‘Mid-Management’ SOL • Designed Specifically for Professional/Managerial Households • Top Income Quintile (20th Percentile) • Due to Regional Salary Variation, No One Income is Specified • One Salary Does Not Fit All Locations • Salary Range is $70,000 to $100,000 • Expected to be Higher in ‘Traditionally’ More Expensive Communities • San Francisco, Boston, New York City, Washington DC, Los Angeles, etc.

  8. Who Participates? • Open to All Places for 23 Years • Influx of Small, Rural and Semi-Rural Communities Forced a Change • Difficulties of Adhering to Standards and Specifications • Participation Restricted to Federally Designated Metropolitan Statistical Areas – Census Bureau • Participation is Open to Other Areas Meeting Certain Criteria • Community Population of 35,000 or More • County Population of 50,000 or More • Some Small Communities ‘Grandfathered’ In • Many Communities Cannot Participate • Famous Examples

  9. How Do We Know the Data Are Accurate? • Three-Stage Review Process • First Stage Review • Look for Computational Errors • Atypical Prices • Unexpected Quarter-to-Quarter Price Shifts • Prices Not in Keeping with State, or Regional Averages • Second Stage Review • Each Report Reviewed Again for Problematic Prices Not Verified in First Stage • Preliminary Report is Run at This Stage • Third Stage • Project Manager Reviews Prices and Calculations Out of Line Regionally or Historically • No more than 2 Standard Deviation Points Difference • Outside Influences May Affect Prices • National Economy

  10. Sampling Size • Samples Vary with Size of MSA • Largest Communities at Least 10 Samples • Micropolitan Areas at Least 3 Samples • More Data Gathered, More Accurate the Report • Wide Price Variations Can Reflect Not Enough Samples

  11. Weights • Grocery Items Index (13.36%) • Housing Index (28.64%) • Monthly principal and interest payment for new home represents 23.50% of the Composite Index • Utilities Index (10.46%) • Transportation Index (10.66%) • Health Care Index (4.44%) • Miscellaneous Goods and Services Index (32.44%)

  12. How to Use the Index • The most common application of the Index is to compare the differences between two places • MSA #1 and MSA #2 – For Example • Subtract MSA #2’s Index from MSA #1’s Index, Divide the Result by MSA #2’s Index, and Multiply the Answer By 100% • [((115.0-90.0)/90.0)*100%] • =(25.0/90.0)*100% = 28% • Fairly Small Differences Don’t Indicate Any Measurable Difference • Sampling and Non-Sampling Errors • Non-Probability Samples Means No Precise Confidence Interval

  13. What Can the Index Tell Us About Dollar Amounts? • U.S. National Average

  14. What Can the Index Tell Us About Dollar Amounts? • Area A

  15. What Can the Index Tell Us About Dollar Amounts? • Area B

  16. Business uses • When evaluating (re)location options • COLI is a key measurement tool in the decision process to help determine competitive wages • Also used to measure the Cost of doing business for retailers/manufacturers. • Helps industries assess the overall economic health of an area • Helps determine if location is a viable option • Thanks to JonesLangLaSalle

  17. Business Uses • Most private industries may use some aspects of COLI • Housing costs and transportation costs are key • Overall COLI may not be applicable to their needs. • Real Estate investors tend to use all of COLI’s features • Residential investors • Determine achievable rental rates and • Housing prices • When working with government agencies • Determining levels of need for grant/program funding • Thanks to JonesLangLaSalle

  18. Business Uses • Helps with personal finance data • Government Policy • Environmental issues • Technology • Use of COLI as the research basis • Market outlook stories • Make reliable predictions • State of various economies • Use with Census Data • Analyze cost of doing business in different metro areas • Thanks to Kiplingers

  19. Business Uses • Use in business reporting • Concentrations of small businesses • Patents and venture capital • Business costs • Use of COLI to break out data on the self-employed • Impact on entrepreneurship and small businesses • Important tool for helping determine location • Changing demographics • Influx of retirees into the economy • COLI data helps businesses adjust • Thanks to Kiplingers

  20. Business Uses • Kiplingers’ Best Cities series • Best Cities for Singles: • http://www.kiplinger.com/slideshow/best-cities-for-singles/1.html • 10 Best Value Cities for 2011: http://www.kiplinger.com/slideshow/best-value-cities-2011/1.html • 10 Best Cities for Cheapskates: http://www.kiplinger.com/slideshow/10-best-cities-for-cheapskates/2.html#top • 10 Great Cities for Starting a Business: http://www.kiplinger.com/slideshow/10-great-cities-for-starting-a-business/1.html • Thanks to Kiplingers

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