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A statistic which assigns a single number to several individual statistics in order to quantify trends. The best-known index in the United States is the consumer price index, which gives a sort of ``average'' value for inflation based on the price changes for a group of selected products.
Let
be the price per unit in period
,
be the quantity produced in period
, and
be the value
of the
units. Let
be the estimated relative importance of a product. There are several types of indices defined,
among them those listed in the following table.
| Index | Abbr. | Formula |
| Bowley Index |
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| Fisher Index | ||
| Geometric Mean Index |
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| Harmonic Mean Index |
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| Laspeyres' Index |
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| Marshall-Edgeworth Index |
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| Mitchell Index |
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| Paasche's Index |
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| Walsh Index |
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See also Bowley Index, Fisher Index, Geometric Mean Index, Harmonic Mean Index, Laspeyres' Index, Marshall-Edgeworth Index, Mitchell Index, Paasche's Index, Residue Index, Walsh Index
References
Fisher, I. The Making of Index Numbers: A Study of Their Varieties, Tests and Reliability, 3rd ed.
New York: Augustus M. Kelly, 1967.
Kenney, J. F. and Keeping, E. S. ``Index Numbers.'' Ch. 5 in
Mathematics of Statistics, Pt. 1, 3rd ed. Princeton, NJ: Van Nostrand, pp. 64-74, 1962.
Mudgett, B. D. Index Numbers. New York: Wiley, 1951.