Price Indices
Introduction
A price index is an index number calculated from the prices and quantities of a period. The most used is the Consumer Price Index, which measures how the spending of an average family evolves.
Calculation of price indices
Contenido
Existen dos métodos principales para calcular índices de precios: el índice Paasche (del economista alemán Hermann Paasche) y el índice de Laspeyres (del economista alemán Ernst Louis Étienne Laspeyres).
Paasche index
The Paasche index has the formula:
being the price index, and the prices and quantities of the item in the initial period or base period, and the same in the subsequent period that we are analyzing. It could be summarized this way:
This index is also known as the GDP deflator:.
Laspeyres index
The Laspeyres index is calculated using the following formula:.
being the price index, and the prices and quantities in the initial period or base period, and the same in the subsequent period that we are analyzing. It could be summarized this way:
The Laspeyres index systematically overvalues inflation, while the Paasche index undervalues it. An important fact is that this index is used to calculate the CPI (consumer price index).
Fisher index
A third index, the Fisher index (by the American economist Irving Fisher), attempts to mitigate the problem of undervaluation or overvaluation of the previous indices, being a kind of intermediate result of the previous two; calculates the Geometric Average of the previous two:.
Types of indexes
In practice, countries use various price indices for different objectives:
The historical series for these three indices follow very similar general trends for most countries, with the PPI being somewhat more unstable and the GDP deflator a little more stable (as it is a weighted average).