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New Methodological Developments for the ICP. W. Erwin Diewert Department of Economics University of British Columbia. Introduction. The World Bank released the results for ICP 2005 in February of this year
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New Methodological Developments for the ICP W. Erwin Diewert Department of Economics University of British Columbia
Introduction • The World Bank released the results for ICP 2005 in February of this year • 146 countries in 6 regions participated in the comparisons of prices and volumes (or real outputs) for the year 2005 • Each of the 6 regions made up its own list of about 1000 narrowly defined products to be priced within the region • These individual prices were aggregated into 155 Basic Headings
Each participating country also provided a GDP breakdown of its expenditures on these 155 categories • Thus if region r has C(r) countries, we have 2 matrices of size 155 by C(r) • One matrix has the country price levels • The other matrix has the country expenditures by 155 commodity classes • Now international comparisons of prices and volumes within the region can be carried out using EKS or GK
But how were the regions linked together? • Another commodity list was constructed; the ring list and 18 countries across the regions priced out this list, enabling linking • This is what led to new methodological developments; we now have a 2 stage procedure for linking the 146 countries • Sections 2 and 3: how to link the 155 BH prices across (a) countries within a region and (b) across regions? • Sections 4 and 5: how to construct aggregate price and volume comparisons across (a) within a region and (b) across regions?
2. Linking prices across countries within a region • The Country Product Dummy (CPD) method (Summers (1973)) was used by African, Asian Pacific and West Asian regions • The Extended (to include representativeness) CPD method (Cuthbert and Cuthbert (1988) was used by South America. Hill (2007) called this the CPRD method. • The EKS* method was used by the OECD and CIS regions.
The CPD method with a balanced panel of price data works as follows: • pcnk = acbnucnk ; c = 1,…,C; n = 1,…,N; k = 1,…,K Taking logs of both sides of (1) leads to: (2) ycnk = c + n + cnk ; c = 1,…,C; n = 1,…,N; k = 1,…,K where ycnk ln pcnk, c ln ac, n ln bn and cnk ln ucnk. • (2) is a linear regression model. The a’s are the country PPPs for the particular BH category under consideration and the b’s are product premiums that depend on the units of measurement
The Basic CPDR model is: (24) ycnkr = c + n + r + cnkr ; c = 1,…,C; n = 1,…,N; k = 1,…,K(c,n) ; r = 1,2 where the c are the log country PPP’s, the n are the log product price effects and the r are the two log representativity effects and the cnkr are independently distributed random variables with mean zero and constant variances. In order to identify the parameters, we impose the following normalizations: (25) 1 = 0 ; 1 = 0. • This is another linear regression model. In principle, it should work better than the CPD method. • The EKS* model is explained by Hill (2007)
3. Comparing Prices Across Regions • The model that was used to link BH price levels across regions was the following generalization of the CPD model: (27) prcnk ar brc cn ; r = 1,…,5; c = 1,....,C(r); n = 1,...,N; k = K(r,c,n) ; (28) a1 = 1; (29) br1 =1; r = 1,…,5 where the above model pertains only to the price data for the ring countries. There are C(r) ring countries in region r = 1,2,3,4,5, the a’s are interregional PPPs and (28) means that region 1 is chosen as the numeraire region, the b’s are the country PPPs for the countries in one of the 5 regions and (29) means that country 1 in each region is chosen as the numeraire country in that region and the c’s are commodity effects that depend on the units of measurement for the products.
In order to respect the parities that were estimated by the regions, the following modification of the basic model above was run by the World Bank: (33) ln prcnk ln brc = ln ar+ln cn + rcnk ; r = 1,…,5; c = 1,....,C(r); n = 1,...,N; k = K(r,c,n). • The above model simplifies into: (34) ln [prcnk/brc] = r + n + rcnk which is a linear regression model. The r are the logs of the interregional PPPs and the n are the individual product effects for the products within the basic heading category of commodities which were price out by the ring countries.
4. Relative Prices and Volumes for Countries within a Region • 5 of the 6 regions used the Gini (1924) (1931) EKS (1964) method to construct aggregate PPPs and relative volumes for the countries in their regions. • But Africa used a new additive method due to Yuri Dikhanov (1997), who generalized a bilateral method due to Doris Iklé (1972). • The DI method is a bit too complicated to explain here; see the paper for the details. • I believe that the DI additive method is a clear improvement over the GK (Geary-Khamis) additive method which was used in earlier rounds of the ICP. • But any additive method suffers from substitution bias (see Diewert (1999) on this) so use caution!
5. Aggregate price and Volume Comparisons Across Regions • Reorganize the countries into 5 regions (we regard the OECD/Eurostat/CIS countries as forming one region). • Consider region r which has C(r) countries in it. Let pnrc denote the within region PPP for basic heading class n and country c in region r and let enrc denote the corresponding expenditure in local currency. • The total regional expenditure on commodity group n in currency units of country 1 in each region, Enr, is defined as follows: (56)Enr pnr1c=1C(r) enrc/pnrc ; r = 1,...,5 ; n = 1,...,155. • The corresponding regional PPPs by region and commodity, Pnr, are defined to be the world BH parities for the numeraire country in each region: (57)Pnr pnr ; r = 1,...,5 ; n = 1,...,155.
Now each region can be treated as if it were a single supercountry with supercountry expenditures and basic heading PPPs defined by (56) and (57) respectively for the 5 supercountries. The EKS method was used to link these supercountries. • Once the interregional price and volumes have been determined, the regional price and volume aggregates can be used to provide world wide price and volume comparisons for each individual country. This method necessarily preserves all regional relative parities. • Hill (2007e) shows that the overall procedure does not depend on the choice of numeraire countries, either within regions or between regions; i.e., the relative country parities will be the same no matter what the choices are for the numeraire countries.
6. Problem Areas and Future Research • The problem of pricing exports and imports. At present, exchange rates are taken as the price of exports and imports. • Inaccurate expenditure weights can cause grave difficulties. • Methodological difficulties with hard to measure areas of the accounts. There are particular problems with housing, financial services and nonmarket production. These are problem areas for regular country accounts as well due to the lack of consensus on an appropriate methodology. • The fact that current System of National Accounts conventions do not allow an imputed interest charge for capital that is used in the nonmarket sector tends to understate the contribution of this sector and the degree of understatement will not be constant across rich and poor countries.
The lack of matching of products. The same problem occurs in the time series context due to the introduction of new products and the disappearance of “old” products but the lack of matching is much worse in the international context due to differences in tastes and big differences in the levels of development across countries, leading to very different consumption patterns. • However, Structured Product Descriptions were introduced in the current ICP round and this does open up the possibility for undertaking hedonic regression exercises in the next round in order to improve the matching process. • There are many problems to be addressed however, and it would be wise to undertake experimental hedonic studies well in advance of the next round.
The fact that the ring list of commodities to be priced was almost entirely different from the regional lists means that there is the possibility of anomalies in the final results; i.e., if entirely different products are priced in the ring list, we cannot be sure the relative ring price levels really match up with the relative prices within the regions. • Thus in the next ICP round, there should be at least some coordination in the determination of the ring product list with the regional product lists so that within each basic heading level, one or more products are on all of the lists.
It would be advisable to undertake some studies on alternative methods of aggregation at the higher levels of aggregation. In particular, the program of making comparisons based on the degree of similarity of the price and quantity data being compared that was initiated by Robert Hill seems to be sensible but users have not embraced it, perhaps due to the instability of the method. In any case, the World Bank now has a considerable data set based on the current ICP round that could be used to experiment with alternative methods of aggregation. • Looking ahead into the more distant future, it would be desirable to integrate the ICP with the EU KLEMS project, which is assembling data on the producer side of the economy as opposed to the final demand side, which is the focus of the ICP. Producer data are required in order to calculate relative productivity levels across economies, a topic of great interest to policy makers. • The data disclosure problem.
7. Conclusion • The regions liked the idea that they could define their own list of products for international pricing and this improved the quality of the data. • The new methodology to link prices across the regions using ring countries also seems to be a clear improvement over previous rounds. • The use of hand held computers and the structured product description methodology led to improvements in the production of national price statistics in many cases. • Overall, ICP 2005 was a major success!