Asked by jeff
Contrary to common belief, the price of a single item as listed in the CPI (Consumer Price Index) does not always rise and fall in tandem with the price of the same item in the PPI (Producer Price Index). Which of the following is not a reason that makes this so?
a.
Imports are excluded from PPI, but included in CPI.
b.
Taxes paid as part of the purchase are not included as part of the PPI but are included in the CPI.
c.
The PPI includes the prices of goods purchased by other producers while the CPI includes only the prices of goods purchased by consumers.
d.
Since the PPI measures the change of the price the producer receives for their product and the CPI measure the change of the price the consumer pays for the product, one should rise while the other will fall.
Please select the best answer from the choices provided
A
B
C
D
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All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
D
Explanation: It's false that PPI rising implies CPI must fall (or vice versa). PPI measures producer receipts and CPI consumer prices, but that doesn't require opposite movements — they often move together. The other choices (imports, taxes, inclusion of intermediate goods) are valid reasons for divergences.
Explanation: It's false that PPI rising implies CPI must fall (or vice versa). PPI measures producer receipts and CPI consumer prices, but that doesn't require opposite movements — they often move together. The other choices (imports, taxes, inclusion of intermediate goods) are valid reasons for divergences.
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