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Who Is Making More? A 2001 graduate of Hiram College got a job that pays $30,000 per year. Thirty years ago, her father started his career with a $7,500.

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Presentation on theme: "Who Is Making More? A 2001 graduate of Hiram College got a job that pays $30,000 per year. Thirty years ago, her father started his career with a $7,500."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Who Is Making More? A 2001 graduate of Hiram College got a job that pays $30,000 per year. Thirty years ago, her father started his career with a $7,500 job. Is she making four times as much as her father did?

3 Who Is Making More? In order to compare the incomes of two different periods we have to eliminate the effect of inflation. What happened to prices between 1969 and 2001? Let’s find out the Consumer Price Index (CPI).

4 Who Is Making More? According to Bureau of Labor Statistics (ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/cpi/cpiai.t xt), CPI in 1969 was 36.7.ftp://ftp.bls.gov/pub/special.requests/cpi/cpiai.t xt CPI in 2001 was 177.5. Base year was 1982-84. If the average price level in 1969 was lower than in 2001, our graduate must not have been three times better off.

5 Who Is Making More? In real terms: –She made (30,000/1.775) = $16,901.41 in 1983 dollars. –He made (7,500/.367) = $20,436 in 1983 dollars. How much was his pay in 2001 dollars? –His pay is (7,500)(1.775/.367) = $36273.84.

6 How To Calculate The CPI? Fix the basket a typical consumer will buy. Find the prices of the items for different years. Compute the basket’s cost for each year. Choose a base year. Calculate the cost of the basket for other years in terms of the base year. Calculate inflation rates.

7 CPI Calculation

8 Problems With CPI Substitution bias. –Basket changes as a response to relative price changes do not get accounted. New products. –Basket changes are ignored. –Prices of new products fall before they are included in the new basket. Quality change. –If the same gadget has higher quality now than in the past but viewed as the same item, an increase in price is not inflationary.

9 Median Household Income According to the US Census Bureau, nominal income for a family of four was $24,332 in 1980. In 1997, it was $53,350. CPI in 1980 was 82.4; in 1997, 160.5. What happened to median real income? How would you change your answer if Boskin Commission is right?

10 Real Median Household Income

11 http://www.census.gov/acs/www/Products/Profiles/Chg/2003/ACS/Tabular/010/01000US3.htm

12 GDP Deflator vs. CPI Space shuttle costs more to operate. –Deflator is up, CPI unchanged. Antiques cost more. –CPI is up, deflator unchanged. Porsche increases the price. –CPI is up, deflator unchanged. New homes cost more. –Both CPI and deflator up.

13 Indexation If payments are automatically corrected for inflation, they are said to be indexed. –COLA –Social Security –TIPS –Variable mortgage rates

14 Costs of Inflation Shoe-leather costs – Economizing on cash – More frequent trips to the bank – More bank employees – Efforts to avoid the erosion of purchasing power

15 Costs of Inflation Noise in the price system – Is it an increase in the demand for a product or is it a general increase in prices? – Should the supplier increase output or not?

16 Costs of Inflation Distortions of the tax system – Depreciation allowance and the replacement cost – Bracket creep

17 Costs of Inflation Unexpected distribution of wealth – Real wage down => workers lose, employers gain – Borrowers gain and creditors lose

18 Costs of Inflation Interference with long-run planning – Increase uncertainty – Impossible to predict the future

19 Hyperinflation Inflation of 500 or more per cent per year. Germany in early twenties. Argentina and currency board.

20 Real and Nominal Interest Rates If you lend someone $1000 for a year and ask for a 5% interest, you will get $1050 at the end of the year. If inflation during the year were 10%, the products you could buy with your $1000 at the beginning of the year now costs $1100. Are you better-off or worse-off?

21 Real and Nominal Interest Rates Lenders will always ask a higher interest rate than the expected inflation to earn income. Nominal interest rates are what the bank quotes, what the car dealer quotes. Real interest rates are nominal rates corrected for inflation. i = r + π

22 Real and Nominal Interest Rates


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