Laspeyres index
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A price index (''plural'': "price indices" or "price indexes") is a normalized
average In colloquial, ordinary language, an average is a single number or value that best represents a set of data. The type of average taken as most typically representative of a list of numbers is the arithmetic mean the sum of the numbers divided by ...
(typically a weighted average) of
price A price is the (usually not negative) quantity of payment or compensation expected, required, or given by one party to another in return for goods or services. In some situations, especially when the product is a service rather than a ph ...
relatives for a given class of
goods In economics, goods are anything that is good, usually in the sense that it provides welfare or utility to someone. Alan V. Deardorff, 2006. ''Terms Of Trade: Glossary of International Economics'', World Scientific. Online version: Deardorffs ...
or services in a specific region over a defined time period. It is a
statistic A statistic (singular) or sample statistic is any quantity computed from values in a sample which is considered for a statistical purpose. Statistical purposes include estimating a population parameter, describing a sample, or evaluating a hypot ...
designed to measure how these price relatives, as a whole, differ between time periods or geographical locations, often expressed relative to a base period set at 100. Price indices serve multiple purposes. Broad indices, like the
Consumer price index A consumer price index (CPI) is a statistical estimate of the level of prices of goods and services bought for consumption purposes by households. It is calculated as the weighted average price of a market basket of Goods, consumer goods and ...
, reflect the economy’s general price level or
cost of living The cost of living is the cost of maintaining a certain standard of living for an individual or a household. Changes in the cost of living over time can be measured in a cost-of-living index. Cost of living calculations are also used to compare t ...
, while narrower ones, such as the Producer price index, assist producers with pricing and business planning. They can also guide investment decisions by tracking price trends.  


Types of price indices

Some widely recognized price indices include: *
Consumer price index A consumer price index (CPI) is a statistical estimate of the level of prices of goods and services bought for consumption purposes by households. It is calculated as the weighted average price of a market basket of Goods, consumer goods and ...
– Measures retail price changes for consumer goods and services. * Producer price index – Tracks wholesale price changes for producers. * Wholesale price index – Monitors price changes at the wholesale level (historical in some regions). * Employment cost index – Gauges changes in labor costs. * Export price index – Tracks export price trends. * Import price index – Monitors import price changes. *
GDP deflator In economics, the GDP deflator (implicit price deflator) is a measure of the money price of all new, domestically produced, final goods and services in an economy in a year relative to the real value of them. It can be used as a measure of the val ...
– Reflects price changes across all goods and services in GDP.


History of early price indices

The origins of price indices are debated, with no clear consensus on their inventor. The earliest reported research in this area came from Rice Vaughan, who in his 1675 boo
''A Discourse of Coin and Coinage''
analyzed price level changes in England. Vaughan sought to distinguish inflation from precious metals imported by
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from the
New World The term "New World" is used to describe the majority of lands of Earth's Western Hemisphere, particularly the Americas, and sometimes Oceania."America." ''The Oxford Companion to the English Language'' (). McArthur, Tom, ed., 1992. New York: ...
from effects of currency debasement. By comparing labor statutes from his era to those under
Edward III Edward III (13 November 1312 – 21 June 1377), also known as Edward of Windsor before his accession, was King of England from January 1327 until his death in 1377. He is noted for his military success and for restoring royal authority after t ...
(e.g., Statute of Labourers of 1351), he used wage levels as a proxy for a basket of goods, concluding prices had risen six- to eight-fold over a century.Chance, 108. Though a pioneer, Vaughan did not actually compute an index. In 1707, Englishman William Fleetwood developed perhaps the first true price index. Responding to an Oxford student facing loss of a fellowship due to a 15th-century income cap of five pounds, Fleetwood used historical price data to create an index of averaged price relatives. His work, published anonymously in ''Chronicon Preciosum'', showed the value of five pounds had shifted significantly over 260 years.


Basic formula

Price indices measure relative price changes using price (p) and quantity (q) data for a set of goods or services (C). The total market value in period t is: :\sum_ (p_ \cdot q_) where p_ is the price and q_ the quantity of item c in period t. If quantities remain constant across two periods (q_ = q_ = q_c), the price index simplifies to: :P = \frac . This ratio, weighted by quantities, compares prices between periods t_0 (base) and t_n. In practice, quantities vary, requiring more complex formulas.Peter Hill. 2010. "Lowe Indices", chapter 9, pp. 197–216 in W.E. Diewert et al.,
Price and Productivity Measurement: Volume 6
'. Trafford Press


Price index formulas

Over 100 formulas exist for calculating price indices, aggregating price (p_0, p_t) and quantity (q_0, q_t) data differently. They typically use expenditures (price × quantity) or weighted averages of price relatives (p_t / p_0) to track relative price changes. Categories include unilateral (single-period weights), bilateral (two-period weights), and unweighted indices, with modern applications favoring Laspeyres for simplicity and superlative indices like Fisher for accuracy in GDP and inflation metrics.


Unilateral indices

These indices use quantities from a single period—either the base (t_0) or current (t_n)—as fixed weights, meaning they do not adjust for changes in consumption patterns over time.


Laspeyres index

Developed in 1871 by Étienne Laspeyres, it uses base-period quantities: : P_L = \frac It measures the cost of a fixed t_0 basket at new prices. This often overstates inflation because it does not account for consumers reacting to price changes by altering quantities purchased (e.g., substituting cheaper goods when prices rise). For example, when applied to an individual consumer’s bundle, a Laspeyres index of 1 means the consumer can afford to buy the same bundle in the current period as consumed in the base period, assuming income hasn’t changed.


Paasche index

Introduced in 1874 by Hermann Paasche, it uses current-period quantities: : P_P = \frac It understates inflation by assuming consumers instantly adjust to new quantities, ignoring that higher prices might reduce demand over time. For example, a Paasche index of 1 indicates the consumer could have consumed the same bundle in the base period as in the current period, given unchanged income.


Lowe index

Named after Joseph Lowe, this uses fixed quantity weights from an expenditure base period (b), typically earlier than both the base (t_0) and current (t_n) periods, where the principal modification is to draw quantity weights less frequently than every period:Peter Hill. 2010. "Lowe Indices", chapter 9, pp. 197–216 in W.E. Diewert et al.,
Price and Productivity Measurement: Volume 6
'. Trafford Press
: P_ = \frac Unlike Laspeyres or Paasche, which draw weights from indexed periods, Lowe indices inherit weights from surveys (e.g., household budgets), often conducted every few years, while prices are tracked each period. For a consumer price index, these weights on various expenditures are typically derived from household budget surveys, which occur less often than price data collection. Used in most CPIs (e.g.,
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, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics), it’s a "modified Laspeyres" where Laspeyres and Paasche are special cases if weights update every period. The Geary-Khamis method, used in the
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’s International Comparison Program, fixes prices (e.g., group averages) while updating quantities.


Bilateral indices

These indices compare two periods or locations using prices and quantities from both, aiming to reduce bias from the single-period weighting of unilateral indices. They incorporate substitution effects by blending data symmetrically or averaging across periods, unlike unilateral indices that fix quantities and miss consumer adjustments.


Marshall-Edgeworth index

Credited to
Alfred Marshall Alfred Marshall (26 July 1842 – 13 July 1924) was an English economist and one of the most influential economists of his time. His book ''Principles of Economics (Marshall), Principles of Economics'' (1890) was the dominant economic textboo ...
(1887) and Francis Ysidro Edgeworth (1925), it averages quantities: : P_ = \frac It uses a simple arithmetic mean of base and current quantities, making it symmetric and intuitive. However, its use can be problematic when comparing entities of vastly different scales (e.g., a large country’s quantities overshadowing a small one’s in international comparisons).


Superlative indices

Introduced by W. Erwin Diewert in 1976, superlative indices are a subset of bilateral indices defined by their ability to exactly match flexible economic functions (e.g., cost-of-living or production indices) with second-order accuracy, unlike the Marshall-Edgeworth index, which uses a basic arithmetic average lacking such precision. They adjust for substitution symmetrically, making them preferred for inflation and GDP measurement over simpler bilateral or unilateral indices.


= Fisher index

= Named for
Irving Fisher Irving Fisher (February 27, 1867 – April 29, 1947) was an American economist, statistician, inventor, eugenicist and progressive social campaigner. He was one of the earliest American neoclassical economists, though his later work on debt de ...
, it’s the geometric mean of Laspeyres and Paasche: : P_F = \sqrt It balances Laspeyres’ base-period bias (overstating inflation) and Paasche’s current-period bias (understating it), offering greater accuracy than Marshall-Edgeworth’s arithmetic approach. It requires data from both periods, unlike unilateral indices, and in chaining, it multiplies geometric means of consecutive period-to-period indices.


= Törnqvist index

= A
geometric mean In mathematics, the geometric mean is a mean or average which indicates a central tendency of a finite collection of positive real numbers by using the product of their values (as opposed to the arithmetic mean which uses their sum). The geometri ...
weighted by average value shares: : P_ = \prod_^ \left(\frac\right)^ It weights price relatives by economic importance (average expenditure shares), providing precision over Marshall-Edgeworth’s simpler averaging, but it’s data-intensive, needing detailed expenditure data.


= Walsh index

= Uses geometric quantity averages: : P_ = \frac It reduces bias from period-specific weighting with geometric averaging, outperforming Marshall-Edgeworth’s arithmetic mean in theoretical alignment, though it shares superlative data demands.


Unweighted indices

These compare prices of single goods between periods without quantity or expenditure weights, often as building blocks for indices like Laspeyres or Paasche within broader measures like CPI or PPI. For example, a Carli index of bread prices might feed into a Laspeyres index for a food category. They are called "elementary" because they’re applied at lower aggregation levels (e.g., a specific brand of peas), assuming prices alone capture consistent quality and economic importance—a simplification that fails if quality changes (e.g., better peas) or substitutes shift demand, unlike weighted indices (e.g., Fisher) that adjust via quantity or expenditure data.


Carli index

From Gian Rinaldo Carli (1764), an arithmetic mean of price relatives over a set of goods C: : P_ = \frac \cdot \sum_ \frac Simple and intuitive, it overweights large price increases, causing upward bias. Used in part in the British
retail price index In the United Kingdom, the Retail Prices Index or Retail Price Index (RPI) is a measure of inflation published monthly by the Office for National Statistics. It measures the change in the cost of a representative sample of retail goods and servi ...
, it can record inflation even when prices are stable overall because it averages price ratios directly—e.g., a 100% increase (2) and a 50% decrease (0.5) yield 1.25, not 1.


Dutot index

By Nicolas Dutot (1738), a ratio of average prices: : P_ = \frac Easy to compute, it’s sensitive to price scale (e.g., high-priced items dominate) and assumes equal item importance.


Jevons index

By W.S. Jevons (1863), a geometric mean: : P_ = \left(\prod \frac\right)^ It’s the unweighted geometric mean of price relatives. It was used in an early
Financial Times The ''Financial Times'' (''FT'') is a British daily newspaper printed in broadsheet and also published digitally that focuses on business and economic Current affairs (news format), current affairs. Based in London, the paper is owned by a Jap ...
index (the predecessor of the
FTSE 100 Index The Financial Times Stock Exchange 100 Index, also called the FTSE 100 Index, FTSE 100, FTSE, or, informally, the "Footsie" , is the United Kingdom's best-known stock market index of the 100 most highly capitalised blue chips listed on ...
), but it was inadequate for that purpose because if any price falls to zero, the index drops to zero (e.g., one free item nullifies the cost). That is an extreme case; in general, the formula will understate the total cost of a basket of goods (or any subset) unless their prices all change at the same rate. Also, as the index is unweighted, large price changes in selected constituents can transmit to the index to an extent not representing their importance in the average portfolio.


Harmonic mean indices

Related unweighted indices include the harmonic mean of price relatives (Jevons 1865, Coggeshall 1887):PPI manual, 600. : P_ = \frac and the ratio of harmonic means: : P_ = \frac These dampen large price drops, offering stability but less economic grounding than weighted indices.


CSWD index

Named for Carruthers, Sellwood, Ward, and Dalén, a geometric mean of Carli and harmonic indices: : P_ = \sqrt In 1922 Fisher wrote that this and the Jevons were the two best unweighted indexes based on Fisher’s test approach to index number theory, balancing Carli’s bias with harmonic stability, though it lacks economic weighting.


Geometric mean index

Weighted by base-period expenditure shares: : P_ = \prod_^ \left(\frac\right)^ A
geometric mean In mathematics, the geometric mean is a mean or average which indicates a central tendency of a finite collection of positive real numbers by using the product of their values (as opposed to the arithmetic mean which uses their sum). The geometri ...
of price relatives, it weights by economic importance, offering stability over arithmetic means like Laspeyres, but it’s fixed to base-period behavior.


Calculation methods


Normalization

Indices are often normalized so the base period equals 100, with later values as percentages. For example, if 2010 = 100 and prices rise 5% by 2011, the index is 105, showing a 5% increase.


Chained vs. unchained calculations

Unchained indices compare all periods to a fixed base (e.g., 2010), amplifying bias over time as quantities diverge. Chained indices update the base each period, calculating period-to-period changes (e.g., 2010 to 2011, 2011 to 2012) and multiplying them: : P_ = \prod_^ \frac Chaining reduces bias (e.g., reflecting recent substitution) but requires more data and can drift if errors accumulate.


Relative ease of calculating the Laspeyres index

The Laspeyres index is simpler to compute than Paasche or bilateral indices because it fixes quantities at t_0, requiring only price updates (e.g., monthly price surveys) without new quantity or expenditure data each period. Paasche needs current quantities, and superlatives like Fisher demand both, increasing data and computational demands.


Calculating indices from expenditure data

Sometimes, especially for aggregate data, expenditure data (E_ = p_ \cdot q_) are more readily available than quantity data. If expenditure and base prices are known, indices can be computed without direct quantities. For example, Laspeyres becomes: : P_L = \frac This uses expenditure shares and price relatives, a practical approach when quantities are hard to measure, though it retains Laspeyres’ fixed-weight assumptions.


Theoretical evaluation

Price index formulas can be evaluated based on their relation to economic concepts (like cost of living) or on their mathematical properties. Several different tests of such properties have been proposed in index number theory literature, and W. Erwin Diewert summarized past research in a list of nine such tests: # Identity test: #: I(p_,p_,\alpha \cdot q_,\beta\cdot q_)=1~~\forall (\alpha ,\beta )\in (0,\infty )^2 #: If prices remain the same between periods and quantities are scaled proportionally (each quantity of an item is multiplied by the same factor of either \alpha, for the first period, or \beta, for the later period), then the index should be 1. # Proportionality test: #: I(p_,\alpha \cdot p_,q_,q_)=\alpha \cdot I(p_,p_,q_,q_) #: If each price in the later period increases by a factor \alpha, then the index should increase by the factor \alpha. # Invariance to changes in scale test: #: I(\alpha \cdot p_,\alpha \cdot p_,\beta \cdot q_, \gamma \cdot q_)=I(p_,p_,q_,q_)~~\forall (\alpha,\beta,\gamma)\in(0,\infty )^3 #: If prices in both periods are scaled by \alpha and quantities by \beta and \gamma, then the index should remain unchanged, meaning the magnitude of prices and quantities shouldn’t affect the result. # Commensurability test: #: If units of measurement change (e.g., from kg to lbs), then the index should not be affected. # Symmetric treatment of time: #: I(p_,p_,q_,q_)=\frac #: If the order of time periods is reversed, then the index should be the reciprocal of the original. # Symmetric treatment of commodities: #: If the order of commodities is permuted, then the index should remain unchanged, ensuring all goods are treated equally. # Monotonicity test: #: I(p_,p_,q_,q_) \le I(p_,p_,q_,q_)~~\Leftarrow~~p_ \le p_ #: If later prices in one period (t_n) are less than or equal to those in another (t_r), then the index for t_n should be less than or equal to that for t_r. # Mean value test: #: The overall price relative implied by the index should lie between the smallest and largest price relatives for all commodities. # Circularity test: #: I(p_,p_,q_,q_) \cdot I(p_,p_,q_,q_)=I(p_,p_,q_,q_)~~\Leftarrow~~t_m \le t_n \le t_r #: If three ordered periods are considered (t_m, t_n, t_r), then the product of the index from t_m to t_n and from t_n to t_r should equal the index from t_m to t_r.


Quality change

Price indices often capture changes in price and quantities for goods and services, but they often fail to account for variation in the quality of goods and services. This could be overcome if the principal method for relating price and quality, namely hedonic regression, could be reversed. Then quality change could be calculated from the price. Instead, statistical agencies generally use ''matched-model'' price indices, where one model of a particular good is priced at the same store at regular time intervals. The matched-model method becomes problematic when statistical agencies try to use this method on goods and services with rapid turnover in quality features. For instance, computers rapidly improve and a specific model may quickly become obsolete. Statisticians constructing matched-model price indices must decide how to compare the price of the obsolete item originally used in the index with the new and improved item that replaces it. Statistical agencies use several different methods to make such price comparisons. The problem discussed above can be represented as attempting to bridge the gap between the price for the old item at time t, P(M)_, with the price of the new item at the later time period, P(N)_. * The ''overlap method'' uses prices collected for both items in both time periods, t and t+1. The price relative / is used. * The ''direct comparison method'' assumes that the difference in the price of the two items is not due to quality change, so the entire price difference is used in the index. P(N)_/P(M)_t is used as the price relative. * The ''link-to-show-no-change'' assumes the opposite of the direct comparison method; it assumes that the entire difference between the two items is due to the change in quality. The price relative based on link-to-show-no-change is 1. * The ''deletion method'' simply leaves the price relative for the changing item out of the price index. This is equivalent to using the average of other price relatives in the index as the price relative for the changing item. Similarly, ''class mean'' imputation uses the average price relative for items with similar characteristics (physical, geographic, economic, etc.) to M and N.Triplett (2004), 24–6.


See also

* Aggregation problem *
Inflation In economics, inflation is an increase in the average price of goods and services in terms of money. This increase is measured using a price index, typically a consumer price index (CPI). When the general price level rises, each unit of curre ...
* Chemical plant cost indexes *
GDP deflator In economics, the GDP deflator (implicit price deflator) is a measure of the money price of all new, domestically produced, final goods and services in an economy in a year relative to the real value of them. It can be used as a measure of the val ...
* Etienne Laspeyres * Hermann Paasche * Hedonic index * Indexation *
Irving Fisher Irving Fisher (February 27, 1867 – April 29, 1947) was an American economist, statistician, inventor, eugenicist and progressive social campaigner. He was one of the earliest American neoclassical economists, though his later work on debt de ...
*
Real versus nominal value (economics) In economics, nominal value refers to value measured in terms of absolute money amounts, whereas real value is considered and measured against the actual goods or services for which it can be exchanged at a given time. Real value takes into ac ...
* U.S. Import Price Index * Volume index * Vimes Boots Index (VBI) - a proposed measure to assess the disproportionate impact of inflation and supermarket pricing practices on the poor


References


Further reading

* Chance, W.A. "A Note on the Origins of Index Numbers", ''The Review of Economics and Statistics'', Vol. 48, No. 1. (Feb., 1966), pp. 108–10
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* Diewert, W.E. Chapter 5: "Index Numbers" in ''Essays in Index Number Theory''. eds W.E. Diewert and A.O. Nakamura. Vol 1. Elsevier Science Publishers: 1993.
Also online
) * McCulloch, James Huston. ''Money and Inflation: A Monetarist Approach'' 2e, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich / Academic Press, 1982. * Triplett, Jack E

''Survey of Current Business'' April 1992. * Triplett, Jack E
''Handbook on Hedonic Indexes and Quality Adjustments in Price Indexes: Special Application to Information Technology Products''
OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Industry working paper. October 2004. * U.S. Department of Labor BLSbr>"Producer Price Index Frequently Asked Questions".
* Vaughan, Rice
''A Discourse of Coin and Coinage''
(1675). (Also onlin
by chapter.


External links


Manuals








Data

* Consumer Price Index (CPI
data
from the BLS * Producer Price Index (PPI
data
from the BLS {{DEFAULTSORT:Price Index * Price index theory Macroeconomics