Title of article :
Quality, quantity, spending and prices
Author/Authors :
Clements، نويسنده , , Kenneth W. and Gao، نويسنده , , Grace، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
16
From page :
1376
To page :
1391
Abstract :
One measure of the change in the “quality” of consumption is the degree to which the consumption basket as a whole moves towards more luxurious goods, away from necessities. We introduce two related measures based on the luxury/necessity distinction. One is an index of the extent to which the prices of luxuries change as compared to necessities, while the second indexes the change in spending. These two measures are interpreted as the price of and spending on quality. The “volume” of quality is then spending deflated by its price. Using the recent International Comparison Program data for 100+ countries, we find that, on average, quality increases with income, but at a slower rate; luxuries are relatively more expensive in richer countries, necessities cheaper; and approximately 75 percent of additional spending on quality flows into a volume component, with the remaining 25 percent accounted for by prices.
Keywords :
Indexes , Quality , Consumer demand
Journal title :
European Economic Review
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
European Economic Review
Record number :
1798768
Link To Document :
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