prisindices
Prisindices are statistical measures that track relative price changes for a defined basket of goods and services over time. They are used to quantify inflation, to adjust wages, contracts, and pensions, and to convert nominal values into real terms. An index is usually set with a base year (often 100), so a current value indicates how prices have moved since that base.
Common methods for constructing price indices include Laspeyres, Paasche, and Fisher indices. A Laspeyres index uses
Various types of price indices are used in practice. The consumer price index (CPI) tracks household expenditures
Methodological considerations include weighting schemes, data sources, seasonal adjustment, and quality changes. Prices are collected from
Limitations exist, including substitution bias, the emergence of new goods, and coverage gaps. Despite these, prisindices