purchasing power
{{Short description|Amount of goods and services that can be purchased with a unit of currency}}
{{Other uses|Purchasing power parity}}
Purchasing power refers to the amount of products and services available for purchase with a certain currency unit. For example, if you took one unit of cash to a store in the 1950s, you could buy more products than you could now, showing that the currency had more purchasing power back then.
If one's income remains constant but prices rise, their purchasing power decreases. Inflation does not always result in decreased purchasing power, especially if income exceeds price levels. A larger real income means more purchasing power, as it corresponds to the income itself.
Traditionally, the purchasing power of money depended heavily upon the local value of gold and silver, but was also made subject to the availability and demand of certain goods on the market.Guy Le Strange, [https://archive.org/stream/palestineundermo00lestuoft#page/44/mode/1up Purchasing Power in 1889 Compared with Same Currency in 985 CE], in: Mukaddasi, Description of Syria, Including Palestine, London 1886, p. 44. Most modern fiat currencies, like US dollars, are traded against each other and commodity money in the secondary market for the purpose of international transfer of payment for goods and services.
Scottish economist Adam Smith noted that having money gives one the ability to "command" others' labor, so purchasing power to some extent is power over other people, to the extent that they are willing to trade their labor or goods for money or currency.
For a price index, its value in the base year is usually normalized to a value of 100. The purchasing power of a unit of currency, say a dollar, in a given year, expressed in dollars of the base year, is 100/P, where P is the price index in that year. So, by definition, the purchasing power of a dollar decreases as the price level rises.
Adam Smith used an hour's labour as the purchasing power unit, so value would be measured in hours of labour required to produce a given quantity (or to produce some other good worth an amount sufficient to purchase the same).{{citation needed|date=March 2016}}{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Adam |title=An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations |date=March 9, 1776 |publisher=W. Strahan and T. Cadell, London |year=1776 |isbn= |edition=1st |location=english |publication-date=March 9, 1776 |pages=314,348 |language=english}}
See also
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- Big Mac Index
- Collective buying power
- Constant purchasing power accounting
- Consumer price index
- Consumerism
- Consumption (economics)
- Fair trade
- Free trade
- Group buying
- Group purchasing organization
- Measuring economic worth over time
- Purchasing power of the U.S. dollar
- Purchasing power parity
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References
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External links
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- [http://www.measuringworth.com/ MeasuringWorth.com] has a [https://www.measuringworth.com/uscompare/ calculator] with different measures for bringing values in Pound sterling from 1264 to the present and in US dollars from 1774 up to any year until the present. The [https://web.archive.org/web/20080119001510/http://www.measuringworth.com/worthmeasures.html Measures of Worth page] discusses which would be the most appropriate for different things.
- [http://demonstrations.wolfram.com/PurchasingPowerCalculator/ Purchasing Power Calculator] by Fiona Maclachlan, The Wolfram Demonstrations Project.
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