[Accessibility Information]
Welcome Current Issue Index How to Subscribe Archives
Monthly Labor Review Online

Related BLS programs | Related articles

ABSTRACT

May 2006, Vol. 129, No. 5

Price measurement in the United States: A decade after the Boskin Report

David S. Johnson
Chief, Division of Housing and Household Economic Statistics, Bureau of the Census.

Stephen B. Reed
Economist, Division of Consumer Prices and Price Indexes, Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Kenneth J. Stewart
Economist, Division of Consumer Prices and Price Indexes, Bureau of Labor Statistics.


This article details the important changes made to improve the Consumer Price Index (CPI) since the 1996 Boskin Report. These changes include the following: 1) the introduction of the geometric means formula to account for lower-level substitution, 2) the introduction of the Chained Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U) to provide an index that accounts for upper-level substitution, 3) expansion of the use of hedonic models to improve the measurement of quality change, and 4) the institution of procedures to introduce new goods into the index more quickly by more frequent updates to the item samples.

ARROWRead excerpt  ARROWDownload full article in PDF (85K)


Related BLS programs

Consumer Price Index


Related Monthly Labor Review articles

Recent and planned improvements to Consumer Price Indexes.May 2002.
Incorporating a geometric mean formula into the CPI.Oct. 1998.
Changing the item structure in the Consumer Price Index.Dec. 1996.
Comparison of the revised and the old CPINov. 1987.
The revised Consumer Price Index: changes in coverageJul. 1986.
Some proposals to improve the Consumer Price Index (PDF).—Sept. 1981.


Within Monthly Labor Review Online:
Welcome | Current Issue | Index | Subscribe | Archives

Exit Monthly Labor Review Online:
BLS Home | Publications & Research Papers