the price level and inflation chapter 1 chapter 6 - continued

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The Price Level and Inflation

CHAPTER

1

Chapter 6 - continued

Measuring Price Level and Inflation• Price Level - average of the prices of all

good and services in the economy

• Price Index – a measure of the price level

2

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Index in General• Index - A series of numbers used to

track a variable’s rise or fall over time

• An index number is calculated as:

• It’s the value of a measure in the current period relative to the base period

Example: Index Number for House Prices

Year House Price Index of House Price

1 $105,000 100.00

2 $110,000 104.76

3 $125,000 119.05

4 $135,000 128.57

4

http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/SPCS20RSA

Note: $110,000/$105,000 = 1.0476 $135,000/$105,000 = 1.2857The convention is to multiply by 100.

Which year is the base period?

The Consumer Price Index• Consumer Price Index (CPI)

– An index of the cost over time of a market basket of goods purchased by a typical household

• CPI includes– the part of GDP that consumers

purchase as final users– household purchases of used goods

such as used cars or used computers– household purchases of imports

5

The Consumer Price Index• CPI does not include

– Goods and services purchased by anyone other than consumers

– Prices of assets, such as stocks, bonds, and homes

• CPI market basket– The collection of goods and services that

the typical consumer buys

6

Broad Categories and Relative Importance in the CPI, December 2010

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(1)define a market basket

(2) determine how much it would cost to purchase the market basket in the current year and in the base year

(3) divide the dollar cost of purchasing the market basket in the current year by the dollar cost of purchasing the market basket in the base year

(4) multiply the quotient by 100.

Calculating the Consumer Price Index

9

Calculating the Consumer Price Index

10

Calculating the Consumer Price Index

Market Basket using 2011 as the Base Year

11

 

CPI in 2012 using 2011 as the based period

Consumer Price Index, December, selected years, 1970–2010

12

1983 = 100

Text Example: Results of Student Expenditure Survey, 1983

13

14

Prices in 2013

=

15

Cost of 1983 Student Bundle in 2013 Prices

Consumer price index• Student price index (SPI)

16

100

100 142

Cost of budget in 2009SPI=

Cost of budget in 1983$142

SPI=$100

2013

From Price Index to Inflation Rate

• Inflation rate – Percentage change in the price level from

one period to the next• Deflation

– A decrease in the price level from one period to the next

17

Consumer Price Index, December, selected years, 1970–2010

18

Year Rate of Inflation

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

Consumer Price Index: 1940 - 2014

19

The Rate of Inflation Using the Consumer Price Index, 1950–2014

20

Three Ways the CPI Is Used• (1) As a policy target; (2) To index

payments; (3) To translate from nominal to real values

• (1) Policy target– One macroeconomic goal is stable prices

• (2) Index payments – A payment, such as Social Security

retirement income, is periodically adjusted by the CPI.

. 21

• (3) Translate from Nominal to Real Values• Nominal wage

– Number of dollars you earn• Real wage

– Purchasing power of your wage

22

Three Way the CPI Is Used

Nominal and Real Weekly Earnings (December of Each Year)

23http://www.bls.gov/news.release/wkyeng.t01.htm

2014 $796 236.2 $337

How the CPI Is Used• When comparing dollar values over time

– We care not about the number of dollars, but about their purchasing power

– Translate nominal values into real values

24

100Nominal ValueReal Value=

Price Index

The Costs of Inflation• The inflation myth

– “Inflation, by making goods and services more expensive, erodes the average purchasing power of income in the economy”

• Inflation does not directly decrease the average real income in the economy– because people’s income increase during

inflations. Prices and income tend to rise together. Not really hurt.

25

The CPI and Average Hourly Earnings,

1965-2009

1965

= 1

00H

ourly wage in M

ay 2009 dollars

$0

$5

$10

$15

$20

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

900

1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010

CPI (1965 = 100)

Nominal average hourly earnings,

(1965 = 100)

Real average hourly earnings in 2009 dollars,

right scale

The Costs of Inflation

• But, Inflation changes the distribution of income.– People living on fixed incomes are

particularly hurt by inflation.

– And the poor have not fared so well. Welfare benefits are relatively fixed and have not kept pace with inflation.

Benefits Indexed to Inflation• To address the distribution problem, benefits

received by many retired workers, including social security, are fully indexed to inflation. – when prices rise, benefits rise.

• If inflation is correctly anticipated– and if both parties take it into account,

then inflation will not redistribute purchasing power

• Nominal interest rate • The actual interest rate borrower’s pay

and lender’s earn from making a loan• Nominal interest rate = Real interest rate

+ Expected inflation rate• Real interest rate

• The nominal interest rate adjusted for inflation.

• Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate - Expected inflation rate

Interest Rates and Inflation

30 of

25

Example:

I borrow $100 from a lender and agree to pay $105 after one year:

Loan amount = $100Interest payment = $5Nominal Interest rate = $5/ $100 = 5%The lender now has $105

Suppose inflation is 2%. What cost $100 a year earlier now cost $102.The lender’s purchasing power increases by $3 not $5.The real interest rate is 5% - %2 = 3%Real Interest rate = Nominal interest rate - inflation

Real vs. Nominal Interest Rates

• If the actual rate of inflation = expected rate of inflation• Inflation does not lead to redistribution

• If the actual rate of inflation < expected rate of inflation• Lenders gain and borrowers lose

• If the actual rate of inflation > expected rate of inflation• Lenders lose and borrowers gain

31

Question

• Confusing real and nominal interest rates• In 1980, mortgage rates were 12% with

10% inflation• In 2013,mortgage rate were 4% with 1%

inflation• Which is a better bargain?

32

Is the CPI Accurate?• Sources of bias in CPI

– Substitution bias– New technologies – Changes in quality– Growth in discounting

33

Is the CPI Accurate?• Substitution bias

– Quantity is fixed• New technology

– CPI: as new products are introduced, CPI overstates inflation

• Changes in quality– CPI: fails to fully account for quality

improvements in the goods and services in its market basket• Overestimates the price of the basket of

goods and services34

Is the CPI Accurate?

• Growth in discounting– CPI: does not recognize that a new

discount outlet lowers the prices on many items

– As discount outlets expand into new areas, the CPI overstates the inflation rate • Food, electronic appliances, clothing, and

other items sold there

35

Is the CPI Accurate?

• Consequences of CPI bias

– Errors in calculating real wages– Errors in indexing

• Retirement benefits, wages, interest payments, or federal tax brackets

36

The Controversy Over Indexing Social Security Benefits

• Social Security system– Benefits to about 60 million retired

workers in U.S.– One of the largest and most expensive of

all federal government programs• More than $770 billion in 2012• Estimated to grow to $1,400 billion in 2023

• Payments are indexed to CPI

37

The Controversy …

• Because the CPI overstate inflation– Nominal payment rises by more than the

actual rise in the price level

– Benefits payments in real terms increase over time

– Purchasing power is automatically shifted toward those who are indexed and away from the rest of society

38

Indexing and “Overindexing” Social Security Benefits

39

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