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Quantitative Techniques – I




                    Notes          On the basis of the above definitions, the following characteristics of index numbers are worth
                                   mentioning:
                                   1.  Index numbers  are specialised  averages:  As  we know  that  an  average  of  data is  its
                                       representative summary figure. In a similar way, an index number is also an average,
                                       often a weighted average, computed for a group. It is called a specialised average because
                                       the figures, that are averaged, are not necessarily expressed in homogeneous units.
                                   2.  Index numbers measure the changes for a group which are not capable of being directly
                                       measured: The examples of such magnitudes are: Price level of a group of items, level of
                                       business activity in a market, level of industrial or agricultural output in an economy, etc.
                                   3.  Index numbers are expressed in terms of percentages: The changes in magnitude of a group
                                       are expressed in terms of percentages which are independent of the units of measurement.
                                       This facilitates the comparison of two or more index numbers in different situations.

                                   10.2 Uses of Index Numbers


                                   The main uses of index numbers are:
                                   1.  To measure and compare changes: The basic purpose of the construction of an index number
                                       is to measure the level of activity of phenomena like price level, cost of living, level of
                                       agricultural production, level of business activity,  etc. It is because of this reason that
                                       sometimes index  numbers are  termed as  barometers of  economic activity.  It may  be
                                       mentioned here that a barometer is an instrument which is used to measure atmospheric
                                       pressure in physics.

                                       The level of an activity can be expressed in terms of index numbers at different points of
                                       time or for different places at a particular point of time. These index numbers can be easily
                                       compared to determine the trend of the level of an activity over a period of time or with
                                       reference to different places.

                                   2.  To  help  in  providing  guidelines for  framing  suitable  policies:  Index  numbers  are
                                       indispensable  tools  for  the  management  of  any  government  or  non-government
                                       organisation. For example, the increase in cost of living index is helpful in deciding the
                                       amount of additional dearness allowance that should be paid to the workers to compensate
                                       them for the rise in prices. In addition to this, index numbers can be used in planning and
                                       formulation of various government and business policies.
                                   3.  Price index numbers are  used in deflating: This  is a very important use  of price index
                                       numbers. These index numbers can be used to adjust monetary figures of various periods
                                       for changes in prices. For example, the figure of national income of a country is computed
                                       on the basis of the prices of the year in question. Such figures, for various years often
                                       known as national income at current prices, do not reveal the real change in the level of
                                       production of goods and services. In order to know the real change in national income,
                                       these figures must be adjusted for price changes in various years. Such adjustments are
                                       possible only by the use  of price  index numbers and the  process of  adjustment, in  a
                                       situation of rising prices, is known as deflating.

                                   4.  To measure purchasing power of money: We know that there is inverse relation between
                                       the purchasing power of money and the general price level measured in terms of a price
                                       index number. Thus, reciprocal of the relevant price index can be taken as a measure of the
                                       purchasing power of money.








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