Integration of Consumer Price Indices and the International Comparison Program for the Asia and Pacific Region: How can They be Achieved?
Ward, Michael; Palanyandy, Chellam; Capilit, Eileen | December 2008
Abstract
The International Comparison Program (ICP) was established as a system for
performing cross-country comparisons. Gross domestic product (GDP) and its
components are converted into a single currency using purchasing power parities
(PPP) thereby eliminating the shortcomings from using market exchange rates for
establishing comparable levels of GDP across countries and estimating poverty
based on internationally comparable poverty lines. The 2005 ICP for Asia and
the Pacific has been hailed as a milestone in statistics with the participation of
23 economies in the Asia and Pacific region and the simultaneous participation
of the People’s Republic of China and India, but concerns confronting past ICP
activities still remain. This paper attempts to provide alternative ways to improve
the operational aspects of ICP price collection on which to base future ICP data
operations, and to do so without countries having to incur significant increases
in regular budget outlays. Hence the integration of consumer price index and
ICP work is confined only to the household consumption aggregate of national
accounts. Further, it explores how a more refined approach that modifies and
expands existing procedures for price collection can be implemented, and how
the ICP approaches can be integrated and sustained by countries even for
nonbenchmark years.
Citation
Ward, Michael; Palanyandy, Chellam; Capilit, Eileen. 2008. Integration of Consumer Price Indices and the International Comparison Program for the Asia and Pacific Region: How can They be Achieved?. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1511.ISSN
1655-5252
Keywords
Economic Welfare
Economic Incentives
Social condition
Economic dependence
Economic assistance
Welfare economics
Welfare state
Poor
Food relief
Poverty
Domestic economic assistance
Show allCollapse
Citable URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1511Metadata
Show full item recordUsers also downloaded
-
Searching for Effective Poverty Interventions: Conditional Cash Transfers in the Philippines
Usui, Norio (Asian Development Bank, 2011-09-01)Conditional cash transfer (CCT), which was initiated in 2007, is becoming a centerpiece of the social protection system in the Philippines. This note reviews economic rationales for transferring a cash grant to the poor contingent on their certain behavior, major challenges in designing a CCT program, targeting methodologies, and impact evaluation designs, to show how the Philippines' CCT program ...Conditional cash transfer (CCT), which was initiated in 2007, is becoming a centerpiece of the social protection system in the Philippines. This note reviews economic rationales for transferring a cash grant to the poor contingent on their certain ... -
Policies for Private Sector Development in Indonesia
Wie, Thee Kian (Asian Development Bank, 2006-03-15)Private sector development and investment in the sense of tapping private sector efforts and investment for promoting economic development is crucial to spurring economic growth and reducing absolute poverty. Combined with public sector efforts, private investment, particularly in competitive markets, has great potential to contribute to growth. Private markets function as the engine of economic ...Private sector development and investment in the sense of tapping private sector efforts and investment for promoting economic development is crucial to spurring economic growth and reducing absolute poverty. Combined with public sector efforts, private ... -
Globalization, Labor Market Regulation, and Firm Behavior
Meyer, Moritz; Vandenberg, Paul (Asian Development Bank, 2013-08-01)The paper analyzes the link between firm characteristics and labor market regulation in five Asian economies—Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Viet Nam. Labor market policies and labor standards do not only affects workers, but also influence firms’ investment and employment decisions. The empirical analysis uses information from enterprise surveys. Empirical results describe ...The paper analyzes the link between firm characteristics and labor market regulation in five Asian economies—Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Viet Nam. Labor market policies and labor standards do not only affects workers, but also ...