tailieunhanh - 15. Principles of Economics (Brief Edition)_2e (12)
Chapter 12: Inflation and the Price. . Explain how the Consumer Price Index is. constructed and use it to calculate the inflation . Show how the CPI is used to adjust economic data. to eliminate the effects of . Discuss the two most important biases in the . Distinguish between inflation and relative price. changes to find the true cost of . Summarize the connections among inflation,. nominal interest rates, and real interest rates. McGrawHill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGrawHill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Measuring the Price Level.• The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measure. of the cost of living during a particular period.• The CPI measures. – The cost of a standard basket of goods and. services in a given year. – relative to the cost of the same basket of goods and. services in the base year.• 2005 is the base year for the CPI. – Base year changes periodically. 122 Calculating the CPI.• CPI is the ratio of the cost of the basket of goods. in the current year to the cost in the base year. – Base year cost $680. – 2011 cost $850. CPI = (850 / 680) (100) = .• Cost of living in 2011 is 25% higher than in 2005. – CPI for the base year is always 1. – CPI for a given period is the cost of living in that. period relative to what it was in the base year. – BEA uses CPI as a percentage – the ratio times. 100. 123 Price Index.• A price index measures the average price of a. given class of goods and services relative to the. price of the same goods and services in a base. year.• CPI measures the change in consumer prices.• Other indices. – Core inflation is CPI without energy and food. – Producer price index. – Import / export price index. 124 Inflation.• The rate of inflation is the Year CPI Inflation. 2005 . annual percentage change. 2006 . in the price level. 2007 .• Inflation in 2006 2008 . ( – ) / 2009 0%. = = Year00 CPI Inflation.• The Great Depression 1929 . – Period of falling output 1930 –. and prices 1931 –. – When inflation rates are 1932 – negative there is deflation 1933 – 125 Adjusting for Inflation.• A nominal quantity is measured in terms of its. current dollar value.• A real quantity is measured in physical terms. – Quantities of goods and services.• To compare values over time, use real quantities. – Deflating a nominal quantity converts it to a real. quantity. • Divide a nominal quantity by its price index to. express the quantity in real terms. 126 Indexing.• Indexing increases a nominal quantity each. period by the percentage increase in a specified. price index. – Indexing prevents the purchasing power of the. nominal quantity from being eroded by inflation.• Indexing automatically adjusts certain values,. such as Social Security payments, by the. amount of inflation. – If prices increase 3% in a given year, the Social. Security recipients receive 3% more. • No action by Congress required. – Indexing is sometimes included in labor contracts. 127 Adjusting for Inflation.• An indexed labor contract.
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