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Econ: What is the Producer Price Index (PPI)? 3 Views
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Description:
What is the Producer Price Index (PPI)? The Producer Price Index is a composite of thousands of price indexes from sellers of of goods and services within the US. The three sectors which comprise the PPI are: commodity based, industry based, and the wholesale index, renamed in the late 1970s as commodity based, final demand-intermediate demand.
Transcript
- 00:00
And finance Allah shmoop What is the producer's price index
- 00:06
or P P I or pit All right short answer
- 00:10
People A measure of wholesale inflation You know inflation Pump
- 00:15
air into a football It gets bigger Keep eating Boston
- 00:18
cream pies and well you'll get bigger Yep those air
Full Transcript
- 00:20
couple of kinds of inflation will in economics Inflation has
- 00:24
to do with prices when prices get bigger like bigger
- 00:27
numbers That's inflation A couple of years ago a movie
- 00:30
ticket cost ten bucks Now it's like twelve fifty That's
- 00:33
inflation Inflation refers to the amount that prices rise over
- 00:37
a given time Right We index it We categorize it
- 00:40
We knew Maris eyes It sort of Inflation is a
- 00:43
key driver of the pp I At least that's what
- 00:45
it's measuring But people measures inflation in a specific part
- 00:49
of the economy See it's relatively easy to see how
- 00:52
much prices are increasing When you're talking about a single
- 00:54
product like that movie ticket right You go to the
- 00:57
store to pick up some adult diapers Eso you Khun
- 00:59
Stream Black mirror without any You know interruptions Been there
- 01:03
done that this week A pack of those diapers cost
- 01:05
you twelve fifty Well last month when you were making
- 01:08
your way through Season five of breaking bad Well a
- 01:11
pack back then Cost twelve thirty five Two months from
- 01:14
now when you're heavy into orange is the new black
- 01:17
Well you head back to the store and a pack
- 01:20
of adult diapers is now a twelve sixty So from
- 01:23
twelve thirty five to twelve fifty two twelve sixty well
- 01:26
prices are going up up up for adult diapers The
- 01:29
A D II or adult diaper inflation index is climbing
- 01:33
fast In just over two months they went up about
- 01:35
two percent or an annualized inflation rate of around twelve
- 01:39
percent That's monstrous people means prices at that rate would
- 01:42
double every six years Well following one products Inflationary tales
- 01:46
should be pretty easy But when you try to discern
- 01:49
inflation rates across an entire economy while things get more
- 01:52
complicated in a dynamic large complex economy like ours well
- 01:56
prices on different products move different directions at different times
- 02:00
Adult diapers might see rising prices but at the same
- 02:03
time prices for ah you know hemorrhoid cream might be
- 02:06
dropping Meanwhile prices for stool softeners are holding steady different
- 02:12
items different inflation trends because different parts of the economy
- 02:15
can have different price trends While there are different economic
- 02:19
stats to track separate segments of the economy the Producer
- 02:24
Price Index is one of these The PP I measures
- 02:26
a particular kind of inflation Specifically it tracks the changes
- 02:29
in prices for wholesale goods Hence the catchy title ng
- 02:33
there with the word produce Sir Price Indexing The first
- 02:36
Pee there Well the P P I is not about
- 02:38
prices consumers pay at the store Rather the PP I
- 02:41
follows prices that companies pay to get the raw materials
- 02:44
they used to make this stuff that shows up in
- 02:46
the aisles at Walmart or it Amazons warehouses The pp
- 02:49
I contrast with the C P I or Consumer Price
- 02:53
Index which measures the retail price is that you know
- 02:56
the regular Joe consumer pays well Here's a list of
- 02:59
some of the stuff that comprises the CP I this
- 03:02
stuff And here's a list of some of the stuff
- 03:04
that comprises the See Threepio Yeah it's different way digressed
- 03:08
Okay You make authentic raccoon skin caps to sell Teo
- 03:11
War of eighteen twelve reenactors you retail the caps for
- 03:15
a hundred bucks each Last month you paid an average
- 03:17
of ten dollars for a raccoon pelt The hundred dollars
- 03:20
retail price represents the consumer price for the cap That's
- 03:24
what the average Joe pays when he buys it in
- 03:26
the store Well Meanwhile the ten dollars for the pelt
- 03:28
represents one of the producer prices you pay You also
- 03:31
have to pay for string and pelt wax and whale
- 03:34
oil to run your authentic eighteen twelve era manufacturing facility
- 03:39
with looms and things But to keep it simple we'll
- 03:41
just look Att pelt prices for now is a stand
- 03:44
in for PP I hear this month the price of
- 03:46
the raccoon pelts goes up to an average of eleven
- 03:48
dollars each That's ten percent higher from where they were
- 03:51
last month So the raccoon pelt component of your personal
- 03:54
PP I was up ten percent from last month to
- 03:58
this month Well the real life P P I is
- 04:00
made of a day divers basket of wholesale goods energy
- 04:03
components like crude oil foodstuffs You know like the stuff
- 04:07
that contains things like weed or rice stuff like that
- 04:10
That's a foodstuff and other components that are included in
- 04:13
it You know from various industries Well they all get
- 04:15
averaged together to create a single measure or a single
- 04:18
index The U S government releases a monthly report outlining
- 04:21
changes in the P P I An increase of point
- 04:23
one percent or point two percent is considered normal Like
- 04:27
things go up to percent a year something like that
- 04:29
Anything above that well could indicate rising inflation pressure Right
- 04:33
Like prices are about to take off But people don't
- 04:35
freak out If one month shows a big move commodities
- 04:37
and wholesale prices tend to fluctuate quite a bit It
- 04:40
only starts to matter of big gains Start to pile
- 04:42
up for a few months in a row So even
- 04:44
though it doesn't measure direct consumer prices the PP I
- 04:47
represents an important economic measure So pay attention to it
- 04:51
Your coonskin cap business experience that ten percent rise in
- 04:54
wholesale prices this month walk the price Then for a
- 04:57
raccoon pelts rose from ten dollars to eleven dollars So
- 05:01
you have a decision to make you Khun Pass along
- 05:03
That cost or expense increased to you to your customer
- 05:07
increasing your retail price from one hundred bucks a unit
- 05:10
to one hundred one To cover that increase expensive a
- 05:12
buck a pelt Or you could just eat the additional
- 05:15
cost and well live with lower profit margins Usually businesses
- 05:19
are reluctant to suddenly pass on increased prices to their
- 05:22
loving customers since commodity markets fluctuate a good deal While
- 05:25
this month's cost increase can disappear next month and then
- 05:29
you just kind of forget about it Also retail markets
- 05:31
are generally competitive The first company to raise prices can
- 05:35
lose out on shelf space or distribution or customer awareness
- 05:39
which all Ri leads to a loss of market share
- 05:41
which would be bad But you went big market share
- 05:43
If you're going to be the king of the queen
- 05:45
of pelts selling if you raise your prices and your
- 05:48
competition doesn't follow suit while customers are going to flock
- 05:51
to the cheaper brand they get a price advantage because
- 05:53
well you panicked and raised prices and you really didn't
- 05:56
need to So if you raise your coonskin price is
- 05:58
one hundred one dollars Cover the rising costs while furry
- 06:01
tops might swoop in with a sail and grab up
- 06:04
a bunch of your customers with lost sales would hurt
- 06:07
more than a slight dip in profit margins That would've
- 06:10
happened Have you raised prices a dollar to cover yourself
- 06:12
So you hold steady and you hope the increased producer
- 06:14
prices or temporary and will you hold your breath with
- 06:17
a big oxygen bottle there However a company can't eat
- 06:20
increased costs forever An upward trend in the PP I
- 06:23
will eventually find its way to the C P I
- 06:26
and people is very important There's a lag between the
- 06:29
FBI and CP I Well the prices for your raccoon
- 06:31
pelts continue to rise It's eleven bucks this month Next
- 06:34
month that rise to eleven twenty five the following eleven
- 06:37
thirty five and six months down the road It's thirteen
- 06:40
dollars Yeah that's a thirteen bucks Well at that point
- 06:42
you can't take the expense increases anymore You have to
- 06:45
increase the price to your customers So you raise the
- 06:48
price for your coonskin caps to one hundred three dollars
- 06:51
making up for the three dollar price increase you've suffered
- 06:54
in buying raccoon pelts over the last several months But
- 06:56
prices for pelts are so high that furry tops in
- 06:59
can't swoop in Now with lower prices they have to
- 07:02
increase prices too because well they've been squeezed with the
- 07:05
same high pel prices you have And similarly the general
- 07:09
PP I figures eventually feed into higher retail price levels
- 07:12
If they don't hire PP I figures eat into corporate
- 07:15
profits which can impact Stock prices are probably would impact
- 07:18
stock prices and eventually the overall economy So yeah that's
- 07:21
the producer price index for pp I a measure of
- 07:24
wholesale inflation complex but still easier to keep track of
- 07:29
than all those Boston cream pies you ate last month
- 07:31
as you continue inflating No just just just just just
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