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Second Quarter 1994
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
| Economic Review
was published until 1999. |
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The Consumer
Price Index
Mark A. Wynne and Fiona D.
Sigalla
The consumer price index (CPI)
is probably the most closely watched indicator of inflation
in the U.S. economy. In this article, Mark Wynne and
Fiona Sigalla explain the construction of the CPI and
evaluate some of its potential shortcomings as a measure
of inflation. Specifically, they examine the discrepancies
that arise between the CPI and the true cost- of-living
index as a result of improvements in the quality of
goods, the introduction of new goods, substitution on
the part of consumers between different goods and retail
outlets, and the difficulty of measuring the prices
actually paid by consumers for the goods they purchase.
The authors review the literature
that quantifies these discrepancies, with the objective
of estimating the magnitude of the overall bias in the
CPI. Wynne and Sigalla argue that, in fact, remarkably
little is known about the extent or significance of
the overall bias in the CPI. They conclude that biases
in the CPI cause it to overstate inflation by no more
than 1 percent a year, and probably less.
The Texas Construction
Sector: The Tail That Wagged the Dog
D'Ann M. Petersen, Keith
R. Phillips, and Mine K. Yucel
The boom-to-bust days of the Texas
construction industry will linger in people's memory
for many years. D'Ann Petersen, Keith Phillips, and
Mine Yucel examine the factors that led to the rise
and fall of the Texas construction industry and determine
the role the industry played in the state's volatile
economy during the 1970s and 1980s.
Petersen, Phillips, and Yucel
employ an econometric model to analyze the roles residential
and nonresidential construction played in the state's
economic fluctuations from 1976 through 1990. The authors
find that, although large swings in oil prices were
the greatest source of economic instability in the Texas
economy, the construction sector also played an important
and independent role in the changing fortunes of the
state. The authors' results show that the homebuilding
sector, in particular, had a large impact on the Texas
economy. In addition, the authors find that the state's
economy needs several years to adjust to shocks in the
construction industry. Consequently, the current expansion
in residential construction is likely to have positive
economic effects in the years ahead.
Is NAFTA Economic
Integration?
William C. Gruben and John
H. Welch
Most economists agree that trade
liberalization raises incomes and living standards.
To achieve trade liberalization, though, countries must
sometimes first reach trade agreements. And trade agreements,
as William Gruben and John Welch observe, may intertwine
elements of both liberalization and protectionism. As
an example, Gruben and Welch examine the negotiation
process that preceded passage of the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
Is NAFTA economic integration?
Although some authors think so, Gruben and Welch believe
that interpreting NAFTA purely as economic integration
is misleading. A more useful way to interpret NAFTA,
they claim, is to start by recognizing it as the latest
synthesis of an ongoing conflict between those who support
trade liberalization and those who want trade protectionism.
NAFTA offers broad-based trade openings, but it still
contains restrictively protectionist components. In
considering the efforts of trade liberalization advocates
and trade protectionists, the authors also attempt to
show how members of these pressure groups form alliances,
disguise their efforts, and otherwise attempt to achieve
their goals.
Solving the
Mystery of the Disappearing January Blip in State Employment
Data
Franklin D. Berger and Keith
R. Phillips
Frank Berger and Keith Phillips
propose a new two-step method of seasonally adjusting
state Current Employment Statistics (CES) data produced
by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). This method,
first proposed in the July/August 1993 issue of Southwest
Economy, recently was adopted by the BLS to seasonally
adjust the broadest industry groupings of the state
employment series. With this new adjustment procedure,
the state employment data should be smoother and better
reflect trend-cycle movements than if a more traditional
seasonal adjustment method were used.
The article finds that forty-six
states suffer a break in their seasonal pattern toward
the end of the data series. The authors explain the
reason for the break and describe a procedure to adjust
for it. Although the BLS is currently using this procedure
for states at the broadest level of industry detail,
analysts who want to seasonally adjust the state employment
data at a finer level of industry detail should find
the authors' description of the process useful. Also,
analysts who seek to seasonally adjust the CES data
for metropolitan areas may find the two-step method
helpful.
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