Price index: Difference between revisions

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A price index is the price of a group of products expressed as a percentage of the price  of a comparable group of products at an earlier date.  The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which  is the most widely-used price index, is the price of the "basket" of products that is purchased by the typical consumer, expressed as a percentage of the price charged for a comparable basket at a stated base date.  The CPI provides an  indication  of changes in the cost of living and it  is commonly used  as a factor to  "''index''" past payments in order to maintain their purchasing power. It is also used as a divisor, or "''deflator''", that is applied to  a percentage increase of a quantity measured in monetary units, such as dollars,  in order to estimate its percentage had it been measured in  physical units, such as gallons.  Price indexes are also available for  a variety of other  prices including those of  factory inputs and outputs, commodities and housing.  
A price index is the price of a group of products expressed as a percentage of the price  of a comparable group of products at an earlier date.  The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which  is the most widely-used price index, is the price of the "basket" of products that is purchased by the typical consumer, expressed as a percentage of the price charged for a comparable basket at a stated base date.  The CPI provides an  indication  of changes in the cost of living and it  is commonly used  as a factor to  "''index''" past payments in order to maintain their purchasing power. It is also used as a divisor, or "''deflator''", that is applied to  a percentage increase of a quantity measured in monetary units, such as dollars,  in order to estimate its percentage had it been measured in  physical units, such as gallons.  Price indexes are also available for  a variety of other  prices including those of  factory inputs and outputs, commodities and housing.  


==Definitions==
==Basics==


==Weighting methods==
==Weighting methods==

Revision as of 05:04, 11 December 2007

A price index is the price of a group of products expressed as a percentage of the price of a comparable group of products at an earlier date. The Consumer Price Index (CPI), which is the most widely-used price index, is the price of the "basket" of products that is purchased by the typical consumer, expressed as a percentage of the price charged for a comparable basket at a stated base date. The CPI provides an indication of changes in the cost of living and it is commonly used as a factor to "index" past payments in order to maintain their purchasing power. It is also used as a divisor, or "deflator", that is applied to a percentage increase of a quantity measured in monetary units, such as dollars, in order to estimate its percentage had it been measured in physical units, such as gallons. Price indexes are also available for a variety of other prices including those of factory inputs and outputs, commodities and housing.

Basics

Weighting methods

Hedonic indexes

The Consumer Price Index

Other Indexes

References