International Finance Theory and Policy
by Steven M. Suranovic
Finance 30-2
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The Consumer Price Index (CPI) and PPPThe CPI is an index that measures the average level of prices of goods and services in an economy relative to a base year. In order to track only what happens to prices, the quantities of goods purchased is assumed to remain fixed from year to year. This is accomplished by determining, with survey methods, the average quantities of all goods and services purchased by a typical household during some period of time. The quantities of all of these goods together is referred to as the average market basket. For example the survey might find that the average household in one month purchases 10 gallons of gas, 15 cans of beer, 3.2 gallons of milk, 2.6 pounds of butter, etc., etc. The basket of goods would also contain items like health and auto insurance, housing services, utility services and many other items. We can describe the market basket easily as a collection or set of quantities (Q1, Q2, Q3, ... Qn). Here Q1 may be the quantity of gasoline, Q2 the quantity of beer, etc. The set has "n" different quantity entries implying that there are n different items in the market basket. The cost of the market basket is found by surveying the average prices for each of the n products
in the market in question. This survey would yield a collection or set of prices (P1, P2, P3, .... Pn).
The cost of the market basket, then, is found by summing the product of the price and quantity
for each item. That is, CB = P1Q1 + P2Q2 + P3Q3 + ... + PnQn (or The first year in which the index is constructed is called the base year. Suppose 1996 is the base year for the US. Let CBYY represent the cost of the market basket evaluated at the prices that prevail in year YY. (e.g., CB00 is the cost of a market basket evaluated in 2000 prices) The CPI is derived according to the following formula,
where CPIYY is the CPI in the year YY. The term is multiplied by 100 by convention, probably because it reduces the need to use digits after a decimal point. Notice that the CPI in the base year is equal to 100, i.e., CPI96 = 100, because CB96/CB96 = 1. This is true for all indices - they are by convention set to 100 in the base year. The CPI in a different year (either earlier or later) represents the ratio of the cost of the market basket in that year relative to the cost of the same basket in the base year. If in 1997 the cost of the market basket rises, then the CPI will rise above 100. If the cost of the market basket falls then the CPI would fall below 100. If the CPI rises it does not mean that the prices of all of the goods in the market basket have risen. Some prices may rise more, some less. Some prices may even fall. The CPI measures the average price change of goods and services in the basket. The inflation rate for an economy is the percentage change in the CPI during a year. Thus if CPI96 and CPI97 are the price indices on January 1st, 1996 and 1997 respectively, then the inflation rate during 1996, 96, is given by,
PPP Using the CPI The purchasing power parity relationship can be written using the CPI with some small adjustments. First, consider the following ratio of 1997 consumer price indices between Mexico and the US,
Given that the base year is 1996, the ratio is written in terms of the market basket costs on the right-hand side and then rewritten into another form. The far right-hand side expression now reflects the purchasing power parity exchange rates in 1997 divided by the PPP exchange rate in 1996, the base year. In other words,
In general then if you want to use the consumer price indices for two countries to derive the PPP exchange rate for 1997 you must apply the following formula, derived by rewriting the above,
where
International Finance Theory and Policy - Chapter 30-2: Last Updated on 1/18/06 |