Chained calculation: Difference between revisions

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In the context of price indices, a '''chained calculation''' means a calculation is done one increment at a time and then multiplied to produce the index for the target date. The increment is usually a year. A chained calculation is in contrast to a fixed-base calculation that calculates the target in one shot. In this sense a chained calculation is "path-dependent".
In the context of price indices, a '''chained calculation''' means a calculation is done one increment at a time and then multiplied to produce the index for the target date. The increment is usually a year. A chained calculation is in contrast to a fixed-base calculation that calculates the target in one shot. In this sense a chained calculation is "path-dependent".


The chained version of an index may require more data points (e.g. in the case of a Laspeyres index) in order to calculate the index for all years. To give an example, the fixed-base version of the Laspeyres index does not require quantity data for all years (only for the base year), even to calculate the index for all years [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_index#Relative_ease_of_calculating_the_Laspeyres_index]. In contrast, the chained version requires quantity data for all years.
The chained version of an index may require more data points in order to calculate the index for all years. To give an example, the fixed-base version of the Laspeyres index does not require quantity data for all years (only for the base year), even to calculate the index for all years [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_index#Relative_ease_of_calculating_the_Laspeyres_index]. In contrast, the chained version requires quantity data for all years.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_index#Chained_vs_non-chained_calculations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_index#Chained_vs_non-chained_calculations

Revision as of 23:57, 28 October 2017

In the context of price indices, a chained calculation means a calculation is done one increment at a time and then multiplied to produce the index for the target date. The increment is usually a year. A chained calculation is in contrast to a fixed-base calculation that calculates the target in one shot. In this sense a chained calculation is "path-dependent".

The chained version of an index may require more data points in order to calculate the index for all years. To give an example, the fixed-base version of the Laspeyres index does not require quantity data for all years (only for the base year), even to calculate the index for all years [1]. In contrast, the chained version requires quantity data for all years.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_index#Chained_vs_non-chained_calculations

See also

External links

References