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CPI and Inflation. What is CPI? Consumer Price Index Measures rise & fall of prices of consumer goods and services Examines average prices of g/s purchased.

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Presentation on theme: "CPI and Inflation. What is CPI? Consumer Price Index Measures rise & fall of prices of consumer goods and services Examines average prices of g/s purchased."— Presentation transcript:

1 CPI and Inflation

2 What is CPI? Consumer Price Index Measures rise & fall of prices of consumer goods and services Examines average prices of g/s purchased by typical urban Canadian household What goods do you believe would you believe are included?

3 What is CPI? Think of a or of products As the prices in the basket go up, so does CPI Calculated monthly in 64 Canadian cities, with approximately 600 items in the basket or cart

4 Weights Some items are given more importance – they are weighted E.g. The cost of vs. A 10% rise in the cost of gasoline has more impact on our economy than a 10% rise in the cost of broccoli (cross category)

5 We can also examine weights within a category Example: a 5% increase in the price of Farmers milk impacts us more than a 5% increase in the price of King Cole Tea People spend more, on average, on milk Milk is weighted at 0.69 and tea at 0.06 in the foods category Weights

6 Weights 2002 ItemWeight Shelter Household Ops. & Furnishings Total Shelter/Housing 26.62% 11.1% 37.72% Transportation19.88% Food17.04% Recreation/Education/Reading12.02% Clothing and Footwear5.36% Alcohol & Tobacco3.07% Health and Personal Care4.73% TOTAL100.0%

7 Items in the Shopping Cart Each category in the previous slide has dozens of individual g/s within ACTIVITY - Get into pairs and come up with several g/s that could be included in each category E.g. Food – flour, milk, meat, etc.

8 Income tax Charitable donations Pension contributions Consumer savings and investments Even though these are areas that many Canadians direct their hard earned income toward, they are seen as PERSONAL – there is no typical scenario Items NOT in the Shopping Cart

9 Price Collection Prices for shopping cart items are collected monthly for most items  Quarterly – haircuts, dry-cleaning  Annualy – property tax, tuition The frequency of price changes for consumer g/s dictated the frequency of price collection

10 Indexing CPI is NOT measured in terms of dollars and cents It examines how much the cost of g/s changes from the BASE YEAR to the next (current base year is 1992!) Example: Base year index is 100.0, the next year is 104.3. The index is 4.3% higher OR the cost of g/s in the shopping cart is 4.3% higher This is an indicator of INFLATION – as CPI rises or falls, it indicates inflation may be rising or falling COLA

11 Not True Cost of Living CPI measures the prices of CONSTANT g/s – they do not change Does not allow for the fact that consumers adjust their spending habits (substitute goods, alternate goods) as prices rise or fall Average representation Quality changes – CPI deals with pure price changes, not product quality

12 CPI Affects… CPI affects three major areas of Canadian economic well-being: 1. OAS, CPP, Social Welfare Payments 2. Rental agreements, spousal/child support, other contractual and price-setting agreements 3. COLA – some clauses link wage increases to CPI  Increase wages the same % as CPI increase

13 Purchasing Power Allows us to examine how far our dollar goes compared to prior periods Example: How much money in March of 2010 has the same purchasing power as $2500 in 1986? Index 1986: 104.92 Index 2010: 149.64 (149.64  104.92 ) X 2500 = $3565.67 What would happen if you did the inverse?


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