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Price Indexes & Aggregate Price Level

Price Indexes & Aggregate Price Level. Chapter 7. Price Indexes . To measure the aggregate price level, economists calculate the cost of purchasing a market basket . A price index is the ratio of the current cost of that market basket to the cost in a base year, multiplied by 100. .

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Price Indexes & Aggregate Price Level

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  1. Price Indexes & Aggregate Price Level Chapter 7

  2. Price Indexes • To measure the aggregate price level, economists calculate the cost of purchasing a market basket. • A price index is the ratio of the current cost of that market basket to the cost in a base year, multiplied by 100.

  3. A Simple Year-to-Year Market Basket Comparison

  4. Calculating the Cost of a Market Basket

  5. Inflation Rate • The inflation rate is the yearly percentage change in a price index, typically based upon Consumer Price Index, or CPI, the most common measure of the aggregate price level.

  6. CPI The consumer price index,or CPI,measures the cost of the market basket of a typical urban American family.

  7. The Makeup of the Consumer Price Index in 2004

  8. Some Questions to Ask? • Who is a typical consumer? • Do we all consume the same stuff? • Do different countries use different weights? • How about different regions of the same country?

  9. Price Effects • Two basic lessons: • Not all prices rise at the same rate during inflation. • Not everyone suffers equally from inflation.

  10. Price Changes in 2000

  11. Is the CPI Biased • The CPI is biased upward when new products whose prices are falling are left out of the market basket.

  12. Biased • The CPI is not a perfect measure of inflation because an increase in price may be caused by quality improvements. • There is no consensus on how large a Bias (if any)!

  13. The CPI, 1913–2004

  14. Other Price Measures • A similar index to CPI for goods purchased by firms is the producer price index. • PPI responds to inflationary/deflationary pressures more quickly than the CPI

  15. Other Price Measures • Economists also use the GDP deflator, which measures the price level by calculating the ratio of nominal to real GDP. • The GDP deflatorfor a given year is 100 times the ratio of nominal GDP to real GDP in that year.

  16. The CPI, the PPI, and the GDP Deflator

  17. The three different measures of inflation usually move closely together. Each reveals a drastic acceleration in the inflation rate during the 1940s and the 1970s and a return to relative price stability in the 1990s.

  18. Political importance of CPI • CPI plays an important and direct role in most peoples lives so it is the most politically sensitive index

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