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Climatic changes. --- Food security --- Medical informatics --- Medical care, Cost of --- Cost-of-living adjustments. --- Law and legislation --- United States. --- United States --- Politics and government.
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Index theory (Mathematics) --- Aggregation. --- CPI. --- Cobb-Douglas index. --- Consumer price index. --- Generalised mean. --- Geometric Young index. --- Hedonic price index. --- Lowe index. --- Price. --- Production theory. --- bias. --- cost-of-living index. --- index theory. --- inflation. --- measurement. --- unit values. --- user cost of capital.
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Currency values, prices, consumption and incomes are at the heart of the economic performance of all countries. In order to make a meaningful comparison between one economy and another, economists routinely make use of purchasing power parity (PPP) exchange rates, but while PPP rates are widely used and well understood, they take a lot of effort to produce and suffer from publication delays. Currencies, Commodities and Consumption analyses the strengths and weaknesses of two alternatives to PPP. Firstly, the so-called Big Mac Index, which uses hamburger prices as a standard of measurement, and second, a less well known technique which infers incomes across countries based on the proportion of consumption devoted to food. Kenneth W. Clements uses international macroeconomics, microeconomic theory and econometrics to provide researchers and policy makers with insights into alternatives to PPP rates and make sense of the ongoing instability of exchange rates and commodity prices.
Consumer price indexes. --- Cost and standard of living. --- Purchasing power parity. --- Foreign exchange. --- Cambistry --- Currency exchange --- Exchange, Foreign --- Foreign currency --- Foreign exchange problem --- Foreign money --- Forex --- FX (Finance) --- International exchange --- International finance --- Currency crises --- Law of one price --- One price, Law of --- Parity, Purchasing power --- Foreign exchange --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Consumer price index --- Cost of living indexes --- CPIs (Consumer price indexes) --- Retail price indexes --- Cost and standard of living --- Price indexes --- Surveys --- Business, Economy and Management --- Economics
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Consumption (Economics) --- Cost and standard of living --- Consumers --- Consumers' preferences --- Consumer behavior --- Consumer price indexes --- Consumer price index --- Cost of living indexes --- CPIs (Consumer price indexes) --- Retail price indexes --- Consumer demand --- Consumer spending --- Consumerism --- Spending, Consumer --- Price indexes --- Demand (Economic theory) --- Surveys --- E-books
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Lard, Lice and Longevity reconstructs economic policies implemented in Denmark and the Netherlands during the German occupation. It clearly shows that the experiences of both these countries during World War I, and during the 1930s equipped them to introduce extensive and intrusive economic controls to ward off a subsistence crisis. In spite of the strong similarities between the two countries in terms of policies and economic order, there remains a glaring difference between the two. Throughout the occupation years, the Netherlands suffered a markedly higher level of child mortality than before or after the war, caused by an upsurge of infectious diseases. Child health in Denmark, on the other hand, declined during the occupation years, and infectious diseases rose only marginally there. In spite of similar policies, hence, the outcome in terms of the biological standard of living was dissimilar. By closely investigating the impact of various policies on everyday life, and the amounts of goods available to different groups of consumers, this study identifies the causes of this remarkable divergence.
Cost and standard of living --- World War, 1939-1945 --- Denmark --- Netherlands --- Economic conditions --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Surveys
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Hong Kong is among the richest cities in the world. Yet over the past 15 years living conditions for the average family have deteriorated despite a robust economy, ample budget surpluses and record labor productivity. Successive governments have been reluctant to invest in services for the elderly, the disabled, the long-term sick, and the poor, while education has become more elitist. The political system has helped to entrench a mistaken consensus that social spending is a threat to financial stability and economic prosperity. In this trenchant attack on government mismanagement, Leo Goodstadt traces how officials have created a "new poverty" in Hong Kong and argues that their misguided policies are both a legacy of the colonial era and a deliberate choice by modern governments -- not the result of economic crises. This book is highly relevant to the continuing debate about the efficiency of market forces in solving welfare "problems" and the claims put forward for the superiority of the private sector in meeting housing, health and educational needs.
Poverty --- Cost and standard of living --- Hong Kong (China) --- Economic conditions. --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Destitution --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Basic needs --- Begging --- Poor --- Subsistence economy --- Surveys --- E-books
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This volume addresses the search for a true price index, the need to know how to convert an amount at one date into the right amount at another date. The index number problem is the longstanding question concerning how such an index should be constructed.
Price indexes. --- Consumer price indexes. --- Microeconomics. --- Price theory --- Economics --- Consumer price index --- Cost of living indexes --- CPIs (Consumer price indexes) --- Retail price indexes --- Cost and standard of living --- Price indexes --- Price indices --- Index numbers (Economics) --- Consumer price indexes --- Microeconomics --- E-books
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Cost and standard of living. --- Families --- Generations --- Social mobility. --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Age groups --- Mobility, Social --- Sociology --- Economic aspects. --- Surveys --- Social stratification --- Sociology of the family. Sociology of sexuality --- Social policy
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Food --- Right to food. --- Cost and standard of living --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Foods --- Dinners and dining --- Table --- Cooking --- Diet --- Dietaries --- Gastronomy --- Nutrition --- Food, Right to --- Human rights --- Standards. --- Standards --- Surveys --- Primitive societies
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The central interest of this innovative book is the role and significance of family in a context of poverty and low-income. Based on a micro-level study carried out in 2011 and 2012, with 51 families in Northern Ireland, it offers new empirical evidence and a theorisation of the relationship between family life and poverty.
Cost and standard of living --- Great Britain --- Economic conditions --- Social conditions --- Poor families --- Finance, Personal. --- Government policy --- Families --- Consumption (Economics) --- Home economics --- Households --- Quality of life --- Wealth --- Luxury --- Prices --- Purchasing power --- Wages --- Comfort, Standard of --- Cost of living --- Food, Cost of --- Household expenses --- Living, Cost of --- Living, Standard of --- Standard of living --- Surveys
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