Christmas Price Index

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Christmas Price Index (US$)
 Year  Christmas
Price Index
Δ% in CPI True Cost of
Christmas
1984 $12,371.56 +1.44% $61,318.94
1985 $12,765.99 +3.29% $62,818.92
1986 $12,920.25 +1.21% $63,402.22
1987 $13,871.75 +7.36% $68,740.80
1988 $13,785.63 -0.62% $67,745.74
1989 $14,598.78 +5.90% $70,961.21
1990 $15,231.72 +4.34% $72,205.12
1991 $15,455.79 +1.47% $71,907.19
1992 $15,581.96 +0.82% $71,618.71
1993 $15,760.70 +1.15% $72,258.42
1994 $15,944.20 +1.16% $73,258.42
1995 $12,481.65 -21.72% $51,764.94
1996 $13,195.86 +5.72% $54,478.36
1997 $13,343.86 +1.12% $55,086.26
1998 $14,214.90 +6.53% $58,405.09
1999 $14,940.17 +5.10% $59,719.33
2000 $15,210.22 +1.81% $60,307.18
2001 $15,748.81 +3.54% $62,935.17
2002 $14,558.05 -7.56% $54,951.31
2003 $16,885.28 +15.99% $65,264.28
2004 $17,296.91 +2.44% $66,334.46
2005 $18,348.87 +6.08% $72,608.02
2006 $18,920.59 +3.1% $75,122.03
2007 $19,507.25 +3.1% $78,100.10

The Christmas Price Index is a tongue-in-cheek economic indicator, maintained by the U.S. bank PNC Financial Services, which tracks the cost of the items in the carol "The Twelve Days of Christmas".[1][2]

Contents

[edit] Origins

The Christmas Price Index was conceived by the bank's chief economist as a humorous commodity price index to measure the changing cost of goods over time. Commodity price indices, as compiled by economics, use a "market basket" of certain goods and then measure the cost of the goods from year to year to gauge inflation in different sectors of the economy.

The Christmas Price Index chose the items in the popular Christmas carol "The Twelve Days of Christmas" as its market basket: a partridge in a pear tree, two turtle doves, three French hens, four calling birds, five golden rings, six geese, seven swans, eight maids, nine dancing ladies, ten leaping lords, eleven pipers and twelve drummers. According to tradition, the purchasing of the items begins on December 25 and ends on January 5.

[edit] Methodology

PNC compiles both a "Christmas Price Index" and "The True Cost of Christmas". The "Christmas Price Index" is calculated by adding the cost of the items in the song. The "True Cost of Christmas", however, is calculated by following the exact instructions in the song (buying a partridge in a pear tree on each of the twelve days, buying two turtle doves from the second day onward, for a total of 22 turtle doves, etc.) for the complete set of 364 items.[3]

The price of a pear tree comes from a nursery in Philadelphia. The partridge, turtle dove and French hen prices are determined by the Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden. The price of a canary at Petco is used for the calling bird. Gordon Jewelers sets the cost of the gold rings. The National Aviary in Pittsburgh sets prices for swans and geese. The maids are assumed to be unskilled laborers earning the Federal Minimum Wage. A Philadelphia dance company provides estimates for the salary of ladies dancing, and the Philadelphia Ballet estimates the leaping lords. The going-rate for drummers and pipers is that of a Pennsylvania musicians union.[4]

[edit] Results

Like other humorous economic indicators, such as The Economist's Big Mac Index which tracks the price of the Big Mac hamburger in different countries, the Christmas Price Index nevertheless produces results which have meaningful interpretations.[5][6]

In general, the prices in the index have reflected the United States's growing service economy—prices for goods have mostly fallen, but prices for labor have risen greatly. The cost of hiring ladies and lords, for example, has risen over 300 percent. After the high cost of the dancers, the seven swans are the most expensive item on the index; the unpredictable breeding cycle of swans makes their supply uncertain.[7] The cheapest item in the index is the partridge which, in 2007, could be purchased for $15. Costs have generally risen and fallen along with the standard United States Consumer Price Index.

The survey also tracks the cost of ordering the items online; doing so is significantly more expensive. In 2007, PNC estimated the cost of purchasing all 364 items online at $128,886.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Spinner, Jackie. "Two Turtledoves, My Love; But Maids-a-Milking? Gone. Whole List? Money Doesn't Grow on Pear Trees", The Washington Post, December 20, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-20. 
  2. ^ Olson, Elizabeth. "The '12 Days' Index Shows a Record Increase", The New York Times, 2007-12-20. 
  3. ^ Gaffen, David. "That's One Expensive Song", Marketbeast, The Wall Street Journal, January 5, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-20. 
  4. ^ PNC Christmas Price Index; History/FAQ. pncchristmaspriceindex.com. Retrieved on 2007-12-20.
  5. ^ Nephin, Dan. "'Twelve Days of Christmas' Gets Costly", Associated Press via Google, November 26, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-12-20. 
  6. ^ O' Hara, Jr., F.M.; F.M. O'Hara III (2000). Handbook of United States Economic and Financial Indicators. Greenwood Press, 328. ISBN 0313274509. 
  7. ^ Olson, Elizabeth. "Those Leaping Lords Don't Come Cheap", The New York Times, December 23, 2006. Retrieved on 2007-12-20. 

[edit] External links

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