Tag Archives: price level determination

Ratio Theory of the Price Level

  • Ratio Theory of the Price Level states that the price level is a relative measure of market value. More specifically, the price level measures the market value of the basket of goods in terms of the market value of money.
  • Mathematically, the price level is a ratio of two variables: the market value of the basket of goods divided by the market value of money.

Ratio Theory of the Price Level

  • The numerator is the market value of the basket of goods: all else remaining equal, as the market value of goods rises, the price level rises. The market value of the basket of goods can rise for all manner of reasons, but a couple of reasons might include a sudden increase in aggregate demand (“too much demand”) or a sudden decrease in aggregate supply (“supply shock”).
  • The denominator is the market value of money: all else remaining equal as the market value of money falls, the price level rises. The market value of money is poorly understood by modern economics because most economists don’t explicitly focus on the “value of money” as a factor in their equations. Indeed, the “market value of money” can only be isolated as a variable if market value is measured in terms of a “standard unit”, i.e. in absolute terms.
  • The key to appreciating Ratio Theory is understanding two microeconomic concepts: (a) the property of “market value” can be measured in both the relative and the absolute, and (b) every price is nothing more than a relative measurement of two market values, both of which can be measured in absolute terms. In this week’s post we will explore both of these microeconomic concepts and then extend them to develop a macroeconomic theory of price level determination, namely “Ratio Theory of the Price Level”.

Ratio Theory of the Price Level: A Useful Concept for Analysis

There are many competing theories regarding price level determination. Economists trained in the Keynesian school tend to believe that inflation is caused by “too much demand” and that one of the primary roles of the central bank is to manage the economy to ensure that it doesn’t “overheat”.

Monetarists tend to believe that “too much money” is the primary cause of inflation, although many monetarists seem to ascribe to a Keynesian transmission mechanism: “too much money” creates “too much demand” which leads to rising prices. Other economists believe that “too much government debt” is the primary cause of inflation, particularly severe inflation (Fiscal Theory of the Price Level).

Each of these schools of thought suffers from a rather narrow perspective regarding the way the economic world works. Economists have made countless efforts to improve these one-sided models by the inclusion of various “expectation terms”, but this has only led to more vague notions such as the idea that inflation is determined by “inflation expectations” (even if this is the case, what then determines “inflation expectations”?).

The view of The Money Enigma is that all of these schools of thought could improve their models by acknowledging what should be a simple notion: the price level is a ratio of two market values.

Ratio Theory of the Price LevelThe price of a good, in terms of another good, is a relative expression of the market value of both goods. The price of a good, in money terms, is a relative expression of the market value of the good itself and the market value of money. Therefore, the price of the basket of goods, in money terms, (also known as “the price level”) is a relative expression of the market value of the basket of goods in terms of the market value of money.

In mathematical terms, the price level is a ratio: the price level is equal to the market value of the basket of goods (the numerator) divided by the market value of money (the denominator).

We can use this simple model of the price level to ask more probing questions about traditional theories of inflation. For example, does “too much money” create inflation because (a) it increases the level of economic activity and raises the market value of goods (VG rises), or (b) increases the monetary base relative to economic output thereby reducing the market value of money (VM falls)?

Similarly, does “too much government debt” lead to rising prices because the fiscal spending increases economic activity (VG rises as there is “too much demand”) or because markets become fearful about the economic viability of society and the value of the fiat currency issued by that society falls (VM falls)?

Ratio Theory also provides a good starting point for any “inflation versus deflation” debate. For example, does economic weakness lead to deflation? While economic weakness should put downward pressure on the market value of goods, the other side of the equation (which is often ignored by Keynesians) is what will happen to the market value of money if confidence in the long-term economic prospects of society begins to falter?

While all these questions represent interesting topics for discussion, the primary goal for this week is to explain the concepts behind Ratio Theory. In particular, most economists will probably struggle with the terms VG and VM in the equation above.

Both of these terms represent market value as measured in the “absolute”: VG is the market value of the basket of goods as measured in absolute terms, and VM is the market value of money as measured in absolute terms.

In order to understand what it means to measure the market value of a good in the absolute, we need to go back to basics and think about the different ways in which scientists can measure physical properties.

The Measurement of Market Value: Absolute versus Relative

The view of The Money Enigma is that “price” and “market value” are not the same thing. While some may believe that these terms are synonymous, there is a subtle but important distinction between the two.

“Market value” is a property possessed by an economic good. For any good to be exchanged in trade that good must be “valuable”, i.e. it must possess the property of “market value”.

The “price” of a good is not a property of that good. Rather, the price of the good is a way of measuring the property of “market value”. More specifically, price is a relative measure of the market value of a good: a price measures the market value of one good (the primary good) in terms of the market value of another good (the measurement good).

If price is a relative measure of market value, then this raises an interesting question: “Is it possible to measure market value in the absolute?”

In order to answer this question, we need to go back one more step and answer a more general question: “What does it mean to measure any property in the absolute?”

Fortunately, science has a well-established paradigm that distinguishes between the absolute measurement of a property and the relative measurement of a property.

The act of measurement is, by definition, an act of comparison. In this sense, all measurements could be considered to be “relative”. However, even though all measurements involve an act of comparison, scientists designated some measurements as being absolute while others are relative.

So, what does it mean to say that a measurement is “absolute”?

A measurement is considered to be “absolute” if we measure something compared to a “standard unit” of measurement.

What makes something a “standard unit” of measurement?

In order for something to perform as a standard unit for the measurement for a certain property, there are two key characteristics that thing must possess. First, it must possess that property. Second, it must be invariable in that property.

These are the two key characteristics of a standard unit of measurement, but there is a third characteristic that most standard units possess: most “standard units” of measurement are theoretical.

Let’s think about this in the context of a simple example: the measurement of height.

We can measure the height of a building in absolute or relative terms. For example, we can say that one building is twice as tall as another building. This is a relative measurement of height.

In contrast, we can measure the height of the building in absolute terms. In order to do this, we need a standard unit for the measurement of height, such as “feet and inches”. Feet and inches are standard units of height: they posses the property of height and they are invariable in that property. Therefore, if we measure the height of the building in feet and say it is 250 feet tall, then that is an absolute measurement of the height of the building.

What we should also note about this example is that feet and inches are theoretical units of measure. The length of one “inch” is not something that exists in nature. We made it up. We decided, on a fairly arbitrary basis, that the length of one inch is “about that much”.

This is true of most standard units of measure: one hour, one mile, one kilogram – they are all theoretical measures of a particular property that we made up to help us measure various physical properties.

Why are most standard units of measurement theoretical? The reason we use theoretical entities as standard units of measure is because nearly everything in nature is variable. By definition, we can’t use objects that are variable in a property as “standard units” of measurement for that property.

In summary, the key difference between an “absolute” and a “relative” measurement is the unit of measure being used. In the case of an absolute measurement, we use a “standard unit” of measure. Most standard units are theoretical units of measure and, importantly, they must be invariable in the property that they are measuring.

In contrast, a relative measurement is merely a comparison of one object (the primary object) with another (the measurement object): it does not require that the second object (the measurement object) is invariable in the property being measured.

Now, let’s return to the main topic at hand: the measurement of market value.

Can we measure the property of “market value” in the absolute? The answer is yes, at least theoretically. But in order to measure market value in the absolute, we need to create a standard unit for the measurement of market value.

Unfortunately, a standard unit for the measurement of market value must be theoretical in nature. Why? It must be theoretical because there is no real-life good that is invariable in the property of market value.

So, what is the key advantage of measuring market value in the absolute? By adopting a standard unit for the measurement of market value, we can now measure the market value of each good independently of the market value of other goods.

Let’s use a simple example: the price of apples in money terms. Let’s assume that the current price of apples is two dollars per apple. This ratio exchange implies that one apple is worth twice as much as one dollar.

Now, let’s assume that next year the price of apples rises to three dollars per apple. What can we say about the market value of apples and the market value of dollars?

What we can say for certain is that the value of one apple has risen relative to the value of one dollar. One apple is now worth three times as much as one dollar.

But what can we say about the value of apples? Has the value of apples risen or fallen? From the facts provided, we can’t answer this question. We know that the relative value of apples has risen, but we can’t say whether the absolute value of apples has risen or fallen.

The price of apples could have risen either because (a) the market value of apples rose, or (b) because the market value of money fell.

In order to know whether the price of apples rose because of (a) or (b) above, we need some way to measure the market value of each good independently from other goods. Our standard unit for the measurement of market value gives us a means to make this type of absolute measurement.

Price as a Ratio of Two Market Values

Introducing a standard unit for market value for the property of market value allows us to measure the market value of goods independently of each other. The key advantage of this approach is that it allows us to express price as a ratio of two market values.

The view of The Money Enigma is that price is a relative measurement of market value. This is hardly a new concept. Adam Smith in “The Wealth of Nations” (1776) seeks to explore the rules that “determine what may be called the relative or exchangeable value of goods”. While Smith may not have explicitly stated that “price is a relative expression of market value”, it was clear that Smith considered price to be “relative” in nature.

Nevertheless, what does it mean to say, “Price is a relative measure”?

In simple terms, if the price of an apple is two dollars, then this implies that the market value of one apple is twice that of one dollar. The money price of an apple is merely a measure of the market value of an apple relative to the market value of a dollar.

This is simple concept, but how do we express this in mathematical terms? The key is measuring the market value of apples and money independently using the standard unit of market value that we discussed earlier.

Price as Ratio of Two Market ValuesLet’s think about this in general terms.

If the market value of good A as measured in terms of our standard unit is denoted as V(A) and the market value of good B as measured in terms of the standard unit is denoted as V(B), then the price of good A, in good B terms, is merely the ratio of V(A) divided by V(B). The price of A, in B terms, can rise either because (1) the market value of A rises, or (2) the market value of B falls.

If “good A = apples” and “good B = money”, then we can say that the price of apples, in terms of money, depends on both the market value of apples and the market value of money.

Importantly, the market value of money is the denominator of the price of apples. All else remaining equal, if the market value of money falls, the price of apples, as measured in money terms, will rise.

Moreover, this is observation is true for every “money price” in the economy: the market value of money is the denominator of every money price in the economy.

The price of apples, the price of bananas, the price of milk… all of these prices, as expressed in money terms, are determined by both the market value of the good itself (apples/bananas/milk) and the market value of money. All else remaining equal, if the market value of money falls, then the price of all these goods, as measured in money terms, will rise.

We can take this one step further.

Ratio Theory of the Price LevelThe price level is a hypothetical measure of the price of the “basket of goods”. In a simplified sense, the price level is an index of prices. If every price in that index is a function of a numerator (the market value of the good) and a denominator (the market value of money), then it follows that the price level itself is a function of a numerator (the market value of the basket of goods, denoted VG) and a common denominator (the market value of money, denoted VM). [The market value of the basket of goods VG can be thought of as an output-weighted index of market values for the goods contained in the basket of goods, where market value is measured in terms of the standard unit.]

The Market Value of Money

Ratio Theory raises an interesting question. Namely, what determines the market value of money, the denominator of the price level?

Economics has largely failed to answer this question because most economists have failed to ask it. Mainstream economics does not have any variable called the “value of money” or the “market value of money” in its equations.

The reason for may not be obvious, but in essence, if you don’t recognize that market value can be measured in the absolute using a standard unit for the measurement of market value, then you can’t isolate the “value of money” as a variable.

Economists will talk about the “purchasing power of money”, but the purchasing power of money is a relative expression of the market value of money. The purchasing power of money is merely the inverse of the price level, itself a relative measure of market value.

The Enigma Series develops a theory of money that might be used to help think about the determination of the market value of money called “Proportional Claim Theory”. In essence, the view of The Enigma Series is that money is a long-duration, special-form equity instrument that represents a proportional claim on the future output of society.

Moreover, The Enigma Series uses this theory to develop a “valuation model” for money. Importantly, this valuation model is expressed in “standard unit” terms and is the first model to solve for the value of money as measured in the absolute. This valuation model for money can also be used to create expectations-based solutions for the price level, the velocity of money and foreign exchange rates.

Readers who are interested in exploring these concepts further should read “Money as the Equity of Society” and “What Factors Influence the Value of Fiat Money?”

If you would like to learn more about Ratio Theory, then please visit the Price Determination section of The Money Enigma or read The Inflation Enigma, the second paper in The Enigma Series.

Author: Gervaise Heddle, heddle@bletchleyeconomics.com

Inflation or Deflation: A Microeconomic Perspective

In this week’s post we shall consider a basic question: “why does the price level rise and fall?” This might seem like a simple question, but a roomful of economists probably couldn’t agree on a succinct answer to that question.

Rather than entering into an extended macroeconomic debate about the causes of inflation, we shall attempt the answer the question “why does the price level rise and fall?” by considering the issue from a microeconomic perspective.

More specifically, we shall consider a couple of the key microeconomic ideas developed in The Enigma Series, namely:

  1. “Price” and “market value” are not the same thing; and
  2. Price is a relative expression of two market values.

The key to understanding inflation (a macroeconomic phenomenon) is a comprehensive theory of price determination (a microeconomic phenomenon). After all, if we understand how one price is determined, then surely we should be able to understand how many prices are determined?

While many inflation commentators prefer to jump straight into a discussion of macroeconomic variables (i.e., the output gap and oil prices), very few begin by answering a couple of the most basic questions in economics, namely “what is a price?” and “how is a price determined?”

If you ask most economists “what determines the price of a good?” the standard answer you will receive is “supply and demand for that good”. However, this represents a very one-sided view of the price determination process.

Price DeterminationIn contrast, the view of The Enigma Series is that every price is determined by two sets of supply and demand: supply and demand for the ‘primary good’, and supply and demand for the ‘measurement good’. More specifically, every “money price” is determined by two sets of supply and demand: supply and demand for the good itself and supply and demand for money.

Before you say, “that’s impossible” or “that’s not what I was taught at college”, let’s step back and answer the first question.

What is a price?

Every price is a ratio of two quantities exchanged. For example, x dollars for y bananas, is the price of bananas in dollar terms. This is a “good/money” price. But the same principle extends to barter prices, or “good/good” prices, and foreign exchange rates, or “money/money” prices.

For example, in a barter economy (an economy with no money), the price of bananas in apple terms could be three bananas per apple. Again, it is just a ratio of two quantities exchanged (a quantity of bananas for a quantity of apples).

Similarly, a foreign exchange rate (i.e., the EUR/USD cross rate) simply represents the quantity of one currency exchanged for a certain quantity of another currency exchanged.

The point is that every economic transaction involves, at minimum, an exchange of two items (bananas for money, bananas for apples, Euros for US Dollars) and the “price” of the transaction is the ratio of the quantities of the two items exchanged.

Now, let’s move on to the more complicated second issue. How is this “ratio of quantities exchanged”, or “price”, determined?

In order to answer this question, it helps to think about what property a good must possess in order for it to “have a price”. For example, why does coffee have a price but sunshine does not? Most people would simply say that sunshine is “free”. But at a more fundamental level, the reason there is a price for coffee and not a price for sunshine is that coffee possesses the property of “market value”, whereas sunshine does not possess the property of “market value”.

For a good to have a price, it must possess the property of “market value”.

Frankly, this proposition should be rather obvious. What may not be as obvious is that for prices to be measured in terms of a particular good (the “measurement good”), that good (the “measurement good”) must possess the property of market value.

In other words, for any good (“good A”) to measure the market value of another good (“good B”), the first good (“good A”) must possess the property of “market value”. It is impossible to determine the price of B in A terms unless A possesses the property of market value.

Let’s consider our coffee versus sunshine example to illustrate the point.

If we chose to, we could measure the market value of all things in terms of coffee beans. For example, the price of bananas might be tens coffee beans, and the price of an apple might be six coffee beans. Coffee beans possess the property of market value and we can measure the market value of other items in the economy in “coffee bean terms”.

Now, could we express all prices in the economy in “sunshine terms”?

The short answer is “no”, but why?

Why is it impossible to express the price of apples or bananas or any other economic good in terms of units of sunshine? The reason that we can’t express prices in “sunshine terms” is because sunshine does not possess the property of market value.

Price as Ratio of Two Market ValuesAnd this brings us to our key point: price is a relative expression of market value.

In any simple two-good exchange, the price of the transaction depends upon the market value of the “primary good” and the market value of the “measurement good”.

If one unit of the “primary good” (for example, one banana) is three times as valuable as one unit of the “measurement good” (for example, one dollar), then the price of the primary good, in measurement good terms, is three units of the measurement good per one unit of the primary good (or, in the case of our example, three dollars per banana).

If the “measurement good” does not possess the property of market value, then we can’t express prices in terms of that good. We can only use money as a “measurement good” for our prices because it possesses the property of market value. Clearly, we can’t use sunshine as our measurement good (we can’t express prices in sunshine terms), because sunshine doesn’t possess market value.

So, let’s return to the main issue. What determines the price of one good, the “primary good”, in terms of another good, the “measurement good”? Is the price determined by the market value of the primary good, or is the price determined by the market value of the measurement good? The answer is “both”.

Price Determination Barter EconomyIn a barter economy, the price of bananas, in apple terms, depends upon both the market value of bananas and the market value of apples. The price of bananas, in apple terms will rise if the market value of bananas rises. More importantly, the price of bananas, in apple terms, will rise if the market value of apples falls.

Similarly, the price of bananas, in money terms, will rise if the market value of bananas rises or if the market value of money falls. If the market value of money falls, then bananas are relatively more valuable, even if they are not absolutely more valuable. Price is a relative expression of two market values. Hence, the price of bananas, in money terms, will rise if the market value of money falls (all else remaining equal).

Ratio Theory of the Price LevelWe can extend this microeconomic concept of price determination to a macroeconomic discussion of inflation.

In simple terms, rising prices across the economy can be caused either by (1) an increase in the market value of goods and services, or (2) a decrease in the market value of money.

Economic weakness and a fall in oil prices may contribute to a decline in the market value of goods. These are both deflationary pressures that act to lower “money prices” across the economy. However, both of these pressures could be more than offset by a decline in the value of money.

The problem with most “inflation or deflation” debates is that the participants don’t recognize the simple notion that price is a relative expression of market value. Any meaningful discussion must consider not only the forces acting upon the market value of goods (oil price, output gap, etc.), but also the forces acting upon the market value of money (expectations regarding future output growth and base money growth).