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11measuring Cost

The document discusses how the consumer price index measures inflation and the cost of living. It describes how the CPI is calculated by selecting a basket of goods and services and tracking the price changes over time. It also notes some problems with using the CPI as a measure including substitution bias, new goods, and unmeasured quality changes.

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Sanya Singh
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views

11measuring Cost

The document discusses how the consumer price index measures inflation and the cost of living. It describes how the CPI is calculated by selecting a basket of goods and services and tracking the price changes over time. It also notes some problems with using the CPI as a measure including substitution bias, new goods, and unmeasured quality changes.

Uploaded by

Sanya Singh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Measuring the Cost

of Living
24
Copyright©2004 South-Western
Measuring the Cost of Living
• Inflation refers to a situation in which the
economy’s overall price level is rising.
• The inflation rate is the percentage change in
the price level from the previous period.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
• The consumer price index (CPI) is a measure of
the overall cost of the goods and services
bought by a typical consumer.
• The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports the CPI
each month.
• It is used to monitor changes in the cost of
living over time.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
• When the CPI rises, the typical family has to
spend more dollars to maintain the same
standard of living.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Fix the Basket: Determine what prices are


most important to the typical consumer.
• The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) identifies a
market basket of goods and services the typical
consumer buys.
• The BLS conducts monthly consumer surveys to set
the weights for the prices of those goods and
services.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Find the Prices: Find the prices of each of the


goods and services in the basket for each point
in time.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Compute the Basket’s Cost: Use the data on


prices to calculate the cost of the basket of
goods and services at different times.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Choose a Base Year and Compute the Index:


• Designate one year as the base year, making it the
benchmark against which other years are compared.
• Compute the index by dividing the price of the
basket in one year by the price in the base year and
multiplying by 100.

CPI=Price of basket of goods and service in current year X 100


Price of basket in base year

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Compute the inflation rate: The inflation rate


is the percentage change in the price index from
the preceding period.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• The Inflation Rate


• The inflation rate is calculated as follows:

C P I in Y ear 2 - C P I in Y ear 1
In flatio n R ate in Y ear 2 = 1 0 0
C P I in Y ear 1

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Table 1 Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: An Example

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Table 1 Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: An Example

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Table 1 Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: An Example

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Table 1 Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: An Example

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Table 1 Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: An Example

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the


Inflation Rate: Another Example
• Base Year is 2002.
• Basket of goods in 2002 costs $1,200.
• The same basket in 2004 costs $1,236.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
How the Consumer Price Index Is Calculated

• Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the


Inflation Rate: Another Example
• Base Year is 2002.
• Basket of goods in 2002 costs $1,200.
• The same basket in 2004 costs $1,236.
• CPI = ($1,236/$1,200)  100 = 103.
• Prices increased 3 percent between 2002 and 2004.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
FYI: What’s in the CPI’s Basket?

16%
Food and
beverages

17% 41%
Transportation Housing

Education and
6%
communication 6%
6% 4% 4%

Medical care
Other goods
Recreation Apparel and services
Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• The CPI is an accurate measure of the selected


goods that make up the typical bundle, but it is
not a perfect measure of the cost of living.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• Substitution bias
• Introduction of new goods
• Unmeasured quality changes

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• Substitution Bias
• The basket does not change to reflect consumer
reaction to changes in relative prices.
• Consumers substitute toward goods that have become
relatively less expensive.
• The index overstates the increase in cost of living by not
considering consumer substitution.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• Introduction of New Goods


• The basket does not reflect the change in
purchasing power brought on by the introduction of
new products.
• New products result in greater variety, which in turn
makes each dollar more valuable.
• Consumers need fewer dollars to maintain any given
standard of living.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• Unmeasured Quality Changes


• If the quality of a good rises from one year to the
next, the value of a dollar rises, even if the price of
the good stays the same.
• If the quality of a good falls from one year to the
next, the value of a dollar falls, even if the price of
the good stays the same.
• The BLS tries to adjust the price for constant
quality, but such differences are hard to measure.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Problems in Measuring the Cost of Living

• The substitution bias, introduction of new


goods, and unmeasured quality changes cause
the CPI to overstate the true cost of living.
• The issue is important because many government
programs use the CPI to adjust for changes in the
overall level of prices.
• The CPI overstates inflation by about 1 percentage
point per year.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer
Price Index
• The GDP deflator is calculated as follows:

N o m in al G D P
G D P d eflato r = 1 0 0
R eal G D P

Copyright©2004 South-Western
The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer
Price Index
• The BLS calculates other prices indexes:
• The index for different regions within the country.
• The producer price index, which measures the cost
of a basket of goods and services bought by firms
rather than consumers.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer
Price Index
• Economists and policymakers monitor both the
GDP deflator and the consumer price index to
gauge how quickly prices are rising.
• There are two important differences between
the indexes that can cause them to diverge.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer
Price Index
• The GDP deflator reflects the prices of all
goods and services produced domestically,
whereas...
• …the consumer price index reflects the prices
of all goods and services bought by consumers.
• E.g. air plane, imported goods

Copyright©2004 South-Western
The GDP Deflator versus the Consumer
Price Index
• The consumer price index compares the price
of a fixed basket of goods and services to the
price of the basket in the base year (only
occasionally does the BLS change the basket)...
• …whereas the GDP deflator compares the
price of currently produced goods and services
to the price of the same goods and services in
the base year.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Figure 2 Two Measures of Inflation

Percent
per Year
15

CPI

10

5
GDP deflator

0
1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
Copyright©2004 South-Western
Real and Nominal Interest Rates

• Interest represents a payment in the future for a


transfer of money in the past.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Real and Nominal Interest Rates

• The nominal interest rate is the interest rate


usually reported and not corrected for inflation.
• It is the interest rate that a bank pays.
• The real interest rate is the nominal interest
rate that is corrected for the effects of inflation.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Real and Nominal Interest Rates

• You borrowed $1,000 for one year.


• Nominal interest rate was 15%.
• During the year inflation was 10%.
Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate –
Inflation
= 15% - 10% = 5%

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Figure 3 Real and Nominal Interest Rates

Interest Rates
(percent
per year)
15

10 Nominal interest rate

Real interest rate


–5
1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
Copyright©2004 South-Western
Summary
• The consumer price index shows the cost of a
basket of goods and services relative to the cost
of the same basket in the base year.
• The index is used to measure the overall level
of prices in the economy.
• The percentage change in the CPI measures the
inflation rate.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Summary
• The consumer price index is an imperfect
measure of the cost of living for the following
three reasons: substitution bias, the
introduction of new goods, and unmeasured
changes in quality.
• Because of measurement problems, the CPI
overstates annual inflation by about 1
percentage point.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Summary
• The GDP deflator differs from the CPI because
it includes goods and services produced rather
than goods and services consumed.
• In addition, the CPI uses a fixed basket of
goods, while the GDP deflator automatically
changes the group of goods and services over
time as the composition of GDP changes.

Copyright©2004 South-Western
Summary
• Dollar figures from different points in time do
not represent a valid comparison of purchasing
power.
• The real interest rate equals the nominal interest
rate minus the rate of inflation.

Copyright©2004 South-Western

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