Measuring the Cost of
Living
Chapter 23
Copyright 2001 by Harcourt, Inc.
All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of
the
work should be mailed to:
Permissions Department, Harcourt College Publishers,
Measuring the Cost of Living
Inflation refers to a situation in
which the economys overall price
level is rising.
The inflation rate is the percentage
change in the price level from the
previous period.
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.
The Consumer Price Index
When the CPI rises, the
typical family has to spend
more dollars to maintain the
same standard of living.
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
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.
How the Consumer Price Index Is
Calculated
Compute the Baskets Cost: Use
the data on prices to calculate
the cost of the basket of goods
and services at different times.
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.
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.
The Inflation Rate
The inflation rate is calculated as
follows:
InflationRatein Year2
CPI in Year2 - CPI in Year1
100
CPI in Year1
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and
the Inflation Rate: An Example
Step 1:Survey Consumers to Determine a Fixed
Basket of Goods
4 hot dogs, 2 hamburgers
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and
the Inflation Rate: An Example
Step 2: Find the Price of Each Good in Each Year
Year
Price of
Hot dogs
Price of
Hamburgers
2001
$1
$2
2002
$2
$3
2003
$3
$4
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and
the Inflation Rate: An Example
Step 3: Compute the Cost of the Basket of Goods
in Each Year
2001
($1 per hot dog x 4 hot dogs) + ($2 per hamburger x 2 hamburgers) = $8
2002
($2 per hot dog x 4 hot dogs) + ($3 per hamburger x 2 hamburgers) = $14
2003
($3 per hot dog x 4 hot dogs) + ($4 per hamburger x 2 hamburgers) = $20
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and
the Inflation Rate: An Example
Step 4: Choose One Year as the Base Year (2001) and
Compute the Consumer Price Index in Each Year
2001
($8/$8) x 100 = 100
2002
($14/$8) x 100 = 175
2003
($20/$8) x 100 = 250
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and
the Inflation Rate: An Example
Step 5: Use the Consumer Price Index to Compute the
Inflation Rate from Previous Year
2002
(175-100)/100 x 100 = 75%
2003
(250-175)175 x 100 = 43%
Calculating the Consumer Price Index and the
Inflation Rate: Another Example
Base Year is 1998.
Basket of goods in 1998 costs
$1,200.
The same basket in 2000 costs
$1,236.
CPI = ($1,236/$1,200) X 100 =
103.
Prices increased 3 percent
between 1998 and 2000.
GDP Deflator
The GDP deflator is calculated as
follows:
NominalGDP
GDPdeflator=
100
RealGDP
Other Price Indexes
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.
Whats in the CPIs Basket?
5%
6%
6% 5% 5%
Housing
Food/Beverages
Transportation
40%
17%
16%
Medical Care
Apparel
Recreation
Other
Education and
communication
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.