(8 of 18) Ch.21 - Relative purchasing power parity

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  • Опубліковано 24 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8

  • @mindloop4070
    @mindloop4070 3 роки тому +1

    excellent explaination...this is the best way to understand relative ppp concept...lot of others youtube tutor either failed or are not able to understand this concpet properly to others...

  • @patrickchen7898
    @patrickchen7898 Рік тому

    you're an amazing professor. thank you!

  • @kevinriahi3012
    @kevinriahi3012 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you so much for creating so many great videos. My uni professor is a smart person but a really bad teacher. So your youtube videos are great revision material!

  • @lokiendgame231
    @lokiendgame231 4 роки тому

    Does relative PPP’s exchange rate not use the ratio derived from comparing 2 commodities? Does it instead use the fluctuating market exchange rate?

    • @teachmefinance9453
      @teachmefinance9453  4 роки тому +1

      Prices for 2 commodities are used in the "ABSOLUTE PPP" formula (not "relative PPP" formula). For example, the "absolute PPP" says that the following should be true: Price for a burger in Japan = Price for the same exact burger in the USA X Exchange rate expressed as Japanese Yen per one US dollar. This formula can be rewritten exactly like you said: Exchange rate in terms of Japanese Yen per one US dollar = Price for a burger in Japan / Price for the same exact burger in the USA.

    • @lokiendgame231
      @lokiendgame231 4 роки тому

      Thanks for answering😀. But I’m wondering if the spot exchange rate you used to convert Japanese Yen to Dollar in the video above is from comparing 2 identical commodities and finding the ratio between them.

    • @lokiendgame231
      @lokiendgame231 4 роки тому

      Basically, where is the exchange rate used in the RPPP calculation from? Is it from comparing 2 commodities or from the foreign exchange market?

    • @teachmefinance9453
      @teachmefinance9453  4 роки тому +1

      @@lokiendgame231 It's from the foreign exchange market. It's given.