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International dollar

The international dollar (int'l dollar or intl dollar, symbols Int'l$., Intl$., Int$), also known as Geary–Khamis dollar (symbols G–K$ or GK$), is a hypothetical unit of currency that has the same purchasing power parity that the U.S. dollar had in the United States at a given point in time.[1][2] It is mainly used in economics and financial statistics for various purposes, most notably to determine and compare the purchasing power parity and gross domestic product of various countries and markets. The year 1990 or 2000 is often used as a benchmark year for comparisons that run through time. The unit is often abbreviated, e.g. 2000 US dollars or 2000 International$ (if the benchmark year is 2000).

It is based on the twin concepts of purchasing power parities (PPP) of currencies and the international average prices of commodities. It shows how much a local currency unit is worth within the country's borders. It is used to make comparisons both between countries and over time. For example, comparing per capita gross domestic product (GDP) of various countries in international dollars, rather than based simply on exchange rates, provides a more valid measure to compare standards of living. It was proposed by Roy C. Geary in 1958 and developed by Salem Hanna Khamis between 1970 and 1982.

Figures expressed in international dollars cannot be converted to another country's currency using current market exchange rates; instead they must be converted using the country's PPP exchange rate used in the study.

Exchange rate by country edit

According to IMF, below is the implied PPP rate of International dollar to local currency of respective countries in 2022:

Country Exchange rate in 2022[3]
Albania 40.22
Algeria 45.28
Andorra 0.59
Angola 228.27
Antigua and Barbuda 2.05
Argentina 67.72
Armenia 161.51
Aruba 1.24
Australia 1.51
Austria 0.74
Azerbaijan 0.67
Bahamas, The 0.81
Bahrain 0.19
Bangladesh 32.11
Barbados 2.31
Belarus 0.96
Belgium 0.77
Belize 1.27
Benin 202.47
Bhutan 20.14
Bolivia 2.51
Bosnia and Herzegovina 0.71
Botswana 4.69
Brazil 2.56
Brunei Darussalam 0.80
Bulgaria 0.79
Burkina Faso 192.77
Burundi 688.36
Cabo Verde 44.33
Cambodia 1332.55
Cameroon 222.10
Canada 1.26
Central African Republic 282.81
Chad 254.59
Chile 460.84
China, People's Republic of 4.10
Colombia 1424.06
Comoros 179.52
Congo, Dem. Rep. of the 1007.08
Congo, Republic of 389.73
Costa Rica 336.75
Croatia 3.29
Cyprus 0.56
Czech Republic 13.38
Côte d'Ivoire 234.62
Denmark 6.63
Djibouti 100.02
Dominica 1.68
Dominican Republic 24.08
Ecuador 0.50
Egypt 4.66
El Salvador 0.46
Equatorial Guinea 337.25
Eritrea 4.69
Estonia 0.60
Eswatini 5.91
Ethiopia 17.03
Fiji 0.83
Finland 0.82
France 0.71
Gabon 352.20
Gambia, The 17.65
Georgia 1.00
Germany 0.72
Ghana 2.71
Greece 0.54
Grenada 1.53
Guatemala 3.88
Guinea 4210.30
Guinea-Bissau 186.19
Guyana 91.64
Haiti 55.74
Honduras 11.03
Hong Kong SAR 5.54
Hungary 153.57
Iceland 148.06
India 23.43
Indonesia 4719.26
Iran 62381.74
Iraq 782.45
Ireland 0.74
Israel 3.51
Italy 0.63
Jamaica 79.79
Japan 90.39
Jordan 0.28
Kazakhstan 172.10
Kenya 43.00
Kiribati 1.09
Korea, Republic of 796.49
Kosovo 0.34
Kuwait 0.23
Kyrgyz Republic 21.74
Lao P.D.R. 3100.29
Latvia 0.53
Lesotho 6.31
Liberia 0.44
Libya 1.52
Lithuania 0.49
Luxembourg 0.85
Macao SAR 4.66
Madagascar 1199.19
Malawi 318.18
Malaysia 1.54
Maldives 7.53
Mali 203.78
Malta 0.55
Marshall Islands 1.11
Mauritania 12.21
Mauritius 16.25
Mexico 9.88
Micronesia, Fed. States of 1.11
Moldova 6.64
Mongolia 1064.79
Montenegro 0.36
Morocco 3.82
Mozambique 23.91
Myanmar 451.68
Namibia 7.18
Nauru 1.27
Nepal 33.56
Netherlands 0.76
New Zealand 1.44
Nicaragua 11.92
Niger 241.31
Nigeria 162.33
North Macedonia 20.06
Norway 11.38
Oman 0.22
Pakistan 44.27
Palau 0.96
Panama 0.45
Papua New Guinea 2.78
Paraguay 2701.54
Peru 1.83
Philippines 18.78
Poland 1.93
Portugal 0.56
Puerto Rico 0.88
Qatar 2.65
Romania 1.92
Russian Federation 32.11
Rwanda 337.15
Saint Kitts and Nevis 1.86
Saint Lucia 1.77
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1.46
Samoa 1.83
San Marino 0.63
Saudi Arabia 1.88
Senegal 235.10
Serbia 42.39
Seychelles 7.64
Sierra Leone 3327.59
Singapore 0.83
Slovak Republic 0.50
Slovenia 0.56
Solomon Islands 7.76
Somalia 0.41
South Africa 6.98
South Sudan, Republic of 181.08
Spain 0.59
Sri Lanka 74.82
Sudan 155.65
Suriname 7.46
Sweden 8.73
Switzerland 1.04
São Tomé and Príncipe 10.77
Taiwan 14.91
Tajikistan 2.36
Tanzania 853.89
Thailand 11.71
Timor-Leste 0.46
Togo 223.31
Tonga 1.71
Trinidad and Tobago 4.71
Tunisia 0.95
Turkmenistan 2.21
Tuvalu 1.44
Türkiye, Republic of 4.23
Uganda 1298.23
United Arab Emirates 2.27
United Kingdom 0.67
United States 1.00
Uruguay 30.82
Uzbekistan 2589.68
Vanuatu 121.11
Venezuela 3.52
Vietnam 7174.60
West Bank and Gaza 1.87
Yemen 447.06
Zambia 6.09
Zimbabwe 356.58


Short description of Geary-Khamis system edit

This system is valuing the matrix of quantities using the international prices vector. The vector is obtained by averaging the national prices in the participating countries after their conversion into a common currency with PPP and weighing quantities. PPPs are obtained by averaging the shares of national and international prices in the participating countries weighted by expenditure. International prices and PPPs are defined by a system of interrelated linear equations that need to be solved simultaneously. The GK method produces PPPs that are transitive and actual final expenditures that are additive.

Inflation adjusting edit

When comparing between countries and between years, the international dollar figures may be adjusted to compensate for inflation. In that case, the base year is chosen, and all figures will be expressed in constant international dollars for that specified base year. Researchers must understand which adjustments are reflected in the data (Marty Schmidt):

  • Population adjustments (In which case, figures represent per capita monies)
  • Currency exchange rate adjustments (In which case, figures will be expressed in one currency unit (typically US$, International $, € £ or ¥)
  • Purchasing power parity adjustments and/or average commodity prices (in which case, figures are typically expressed as International $)
  • Inflation adjustments (in which case, figures have been adjusted, based on changes in an inflation index such as the consumer price index, to represent currency for a "base" year, such as 2000).

Description of Geary-Khamis system edit

Suppose PPPj is the parity of j-th currency with a currency called international dollars, which may reflect any currency, however, US dollar is the most commonly used. Then the international price Pi is defined as an international average of prices of i-th commodity in various countries. Prices in these countries are expressed in their national currencies. Geary-Khamis method solves this by using national prices after conversion into a common currency using the purchasing power parities (PPP). Hence, the international price, Pi of i-th commodity is defined as:

 

This equation implies that the international price of i-th commodity is calculated by dividing the total output of i-th commodity in all selected countries, converted in international dollars, using purchasing power parities, by the total quantity produced of i-th commodity. Previous equation can be rewritten as follows:

 

This equation suggests that Pi is weighted average of international prices pij after conversion into international dollars using PPPj. PPPj is by Geary-Khamis system defined through this equation:

 

The numerator of the equation represents the total value of output in j-th country expressed in national currency, and the denominator is the value of j-th country output evaluated by repricing at international prices Pi in international dollars. Then PPPj gives the number of national currency units per international dollar.

Advantages of Geary-Khamis method edit

Geary-Khamis international dollar is widely used by foreign investors and institutions such as IMF, FAO and World Bank. It has become so widely used because it made possible to compare living standards between countries. Thanks to the international dollar they can see more trustworthy economic situation in the country and decide whether to provide additional loans (or any other investments) to said country, or not. It also offers some comparison of purchasing power parities all around the world (developing countries tend to have higher PPPs). Some traders even use Geary-Khamis method to determine if country's currency is undervalued or overvalued. Exchange rates are frequently used for comparing currencies, however, this approach does not reflect real value of currency in said country. It is better to include PPP or prices of goods in said country. International dollar solves this by taking into account exchange rates, PPP and average commodity prices. Geary-Khamis method is the best method for comparisons of agricultural outputs.

Criticism of using 1990 US dollars for long run comparisons edit

Economists and historians use many methods when they want to research economic development in the past. For example, if we take the United States of America and United Kingdom (these two examples were compared many times in various researches), someone may use nominal exchange rates, Lindert and Williamson (2016) used PPP exchange rates and Broadberry (2003) used growth rates using own-country price indices. However, none of them is somehow better than the others (or theoretically justifiable). There is a high probability that these three methods will give three different answers, and, in fact, Brunt and Fidalgo (2018)[4] showed in their paper that "these three approaches do give three different answers when estimating output levels and growth rates in the US and UK – and they are not only different to one another, but also different to a comparison using the (more theoretically justifiable) chained GK prices." Even though it is more theoretically justifiable, it does not mean it should be used without considering every aspect of this method.

For example, Maddison (2001) used the 1990 international dollar when he examined prices during the time of Christ. Ideally, we would use a price benchmark which is significantly closer to the time of Christ. However, there are no such benchmarks. Another problem is that there is no set of international prices, which we could use for valid cross-country comparisons. Comparing GDP levels across countries using their own prices converted at the nominal exchange rate has no value whatsoever. This approach is quite arbitrary because the exchange rate is determined simply by the supply and demand for currency and these metrics are greatly dependent on the volumes of trade balances. It makes little (or no) sense to value all goods (both traded and non-traded at the nominal exchange rate, especially since the absolute volumes of trades may be small compared to total output in both countries.

Economists therefore create PPP exchange rates, deriving the exchange rate by valuing a basket of goods in the two countries at two sets of prices (and expressing them as a ratio afterwards). This allows us to see how much it actually costs to live in said country. Although with this approach emerges another problem. What should we choose to be in the basket? Brunt and Fidalgo (2018) use examples of an English basket in 1775 and Chinese basket in 1775. While the English one would have a lot of wheat, the Chinese one would have a lot of rice. Wheat was quite affordable in England and rice was quite affordable in China, however, if we switch these goods, they both would be relatively expensive. This nicely illustrates how choice of the content of the basket will influence the comparison. Simply by using English basket, China would seem like an expensive place to live and vice versa.

Geary-Khamis tries to solve this by estimating a weighted average price of each commodity using the shares of countries in world production to weight the country prices. Another problem emerges when researchers compare countries which have different price structure than the international price structure. Brunt and Fidalgo (2018) show examples of Ireland (which has really similar price structure to the international) and South Africa (which has really different price structure to the international). So, when using domestic and international price indices, Ireland's growth rates move in very similar direction, but when domestic and international prices are applied to South Africa, they, in fact, move in opposite directions. It is worth noting, that bigger countries tend to have a price index that moves more similarly to the international price index. It is simply because bigger countries have a bigger weight in creation of this index.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "International Dollar Geary-Khamis Defined, Examples Explained". Business Case Web Site. 24 February 2016. Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  2. ^ "What is an "international dollar"?". World Bank Data Help Desk. Retrieved 13 April 2019.
  3. ^ "World Economic Outlook (October 2022)". imf.org. Retrieved 19 October 2022.
  4. ^ Brunt, Liam; Fidalgo, Antonio (13 December 2018). "Why 1990 International Geary-Khamis Dollars Cannot Be a Foundation for Reliable Long Run Comparisons of GDP" (PDF). SSRN Electronic Journal. doi:10.2139/ssrn.3292792. hdl:11250/2575366. ISSN 0804-6824. S2CID 158301926. Retrieved 17 November 2022.

External links edit

  • Handbook of the International Comparison Programme. Annex II – Methods of Aggregation. Statistical definition at the UN United Nations Statistics Division. 2007
  • IMF – Implied PPP conversion rate/National currency per international dollar
  • FAO Geary-Khamis statistical yearbook http://www.fao.org/fileadmin/templates/ess/documents/publications_studies/statistical_yearbook/gearyKhamis.pdf
  • Brunt, L., Fidalgo, A., (2018) Why 1990 international Geary-Khamis dollars cannot be a foundation for reliable long run comparisons of GDP
  • Deaton, A., Heston, A., (2009) Understanding PPPs and PPP-based national accounts https://www.princeton.edu/~deaton/downloads/deaton_heston_complete_nov10.pdf
  • Schmidt, M., International Dollar, Geary-Khamis Dollar https://www.business-case-analysis.com/international-dollar.html
  • Cuthbert, J., R., Cuthbert, M., (1988) On aggregation methods of purchasing power parities, OECD https://www.oecd.org/economy/outlook/2002058.pdf

international, dollar, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, dece. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources International dollar news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The international dollar int l dollar or intl dollar symbols Int l Intl Int also known as Geary Khamis dollar symbols G K or GK is a hypothetical unit of currency that has the same purchasing power parity that the U S dollar had in the United States at a given point in time 1 2 It is mainly used in economics and financial statistics for various purposes most notably to determine and compare the purchasing power parity and gross domestic product of various countries and markets The year 1990 or 2000 is often used as a benchmark year for comparisons that run through time The unit is often abbreviated e g 2000 US dollars or 2000 International if the benchmark year is 2000 It is based on the twin concepts of purchasing power parities PPP of currencies and the international average prices of commodities It shows how much a local currency unit is worth within the country s borders It is used to make comparisons both between countries and over time For example comparing per capita gross domestic product GDP of various countries in international dollars rather than based simply on exchange rates provides a more valid measure to compare standards of living It was proposed by Roy C Geary in 1958 and developed by Salem Hanna Khamis between 1970 and 1982 Figures expressed in international dollars cannot be converted to another country s currency using current market exchange rates instead they must be converted using the country s PPP exchange rate used in the study Contents 1 Exchange rate by country 2 Short description of Geary Khamis system 3 Inflation adjusting 4 Description of Geary Khamis system 5 Advantages of Geary Khamis method 6 Criticism of using 1990 US dollars for long run comparisons 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksExchange rate by country editAccording to IMF below is the implied PPP rate of International dollar to local currency of respective countries in 2022 Country Exchange rate in 2022 3 Albania 40 22Algeria 45 28Andorra 0 59Angola 228 27Antigua and Barbuda 2 05Argentina 67 72Armenia 161 51Aruba 1 24Australia 1 51Austria 0 74Azerbaijan 0 67Bahamas The 0 81Bahrain 0 19Bangladesh 32 11Barbados 2 31Belarus 0 96Belgium 0 77Belize 1 27Benin 202 47Bhutan 20 14Bolivia 2 51Bosnia and Herzegovina 0 71Botswana 4 69Brazil 2 56Brunei Darussalam 0 80Bulgaria 0 79Burkina Faso 192 77Burundi 688 36Cabo Verde 44 33Cambodia 1332 55Cameroon 222 10Canada 1 26Central African Republic 282 81Chad 254 59Chile 460 84China People s Republic of 4 10Colombia 1424 06Comoros 179 52Congo Dem Rep of the 1007 08Congo Republic of 389 73Costa Rica 336 75Croatia 3 29Cyprus 0 56Czech Republic 13 38Cote d Ivoire 234 62Denmark 6 63Djibouti 100 02Dominica 1 68Dominican Republic 24 08Ecuador 0 50Egypt 4 66El Salvador 0 46Equatorial Guinea 337 25Eritrea 4 69Estonia 0 60Eswatini 5 91Ethiopia 17 03Fiji 0 83Finland 0 82France 0 71Gabon 352 20Gambia The 17 65Georgia 1 00Germany 0 72Ghana 2 71Greece 0 54Grenada 1 53Guatemala 3 88Guinea 4210 30Guinea Bissau 186 19Guyana 91 64Haiti 55 74Honduras 11 03Hong Kong SAR 5 54Hungary 153 57Iceland 148 06India 23 43Indonesia 4719 26Iran 62381 74Iraq 782 45Ireland 0 74Israel 3 51Italy 0 63Jamaica 79 79Japan 90 39Jordan 0 28Kazakhstan 172 10Kenya 43 00Kiribati 1 09Korea Republic of 796 49Kosovo 0 34Kuwait 0 23Kyrgyz Republic 21 74Lao P D R 3100 29Latvia 0 53Lesotho 6 31Liberia 0 44Libya 1 52Lithuania 0 49Luxembourg 0 85Macao SAR 4 66Madagascar 1199 19Malawi 318 18Malaysia 1 54Maldives 7 53Mali 203 78Malta 0 55Marshall Islands 1 11Mauritania 12 21Mauritius 16 25Mexico 9 88Micronesia Fed States of 1 11Moldova 6 64Mongolia 1064 79Montenegro 0 36Morocco 3 82Mozambique 23 91Myanmar 451 68Namibia 7 18Nauru 1 27Nepal 33 56Netherlands 0 76New Zealand 1 44Nicaragua 11 92Niger 241 31Nigeria 162 33North Macedonia 20 06Norway 11 38Oman 0 22Pakistan 44 27Palau 0 96Panama 0 45Papua New Guinea 2 78Paraguay 2701 54Peru 1 83Philippines 18 78Poland 1 93Portugal 0 56Puerto Rico 0 88Qatar 2 65Romania 1 92Russian Federation 32 11Rwanda 337 15Saint Kitts and Nevis 1 86Saint Lucia 1 77Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1 46Samoa 1 83San Marino 0 63Saudi Arabia 1 88Senegal 235 10Serbia 42 39Seychelles 7 64Sierra Leone 3327 59Singapore 0 83Slovak Republic 0 50Slovenia 0 56Solomon Islands 7 76Somalia 0 41South Africa 6 98South Sudan Republic of 181 08Spain 0 59Sri Lanka 74 82Sudan 155 65Suriname 7 46Sweden 8 73Switzerland 1 04Sao Tome and Principe 10 77Taiwan 14 91Tajikistan 2 36Tanzania 853 89Thailand 11 71Timor Leste 0 46Togo 223 31Tonga 1 71Trinidad and Tobago 4 71Tunisia 0 95Turkmenistan 2 21Tuvalu 1 44Turkiye Republic of 4 23Uganda 1298 23United Arab Emirates 2 27United Kingdom 0 67United States 1 00Uruguay 30 82Uzbekistan 2589 68Vanuatu 121 11Venezuela 3 52Vietnam 7174 60West Bank and Gaza 1 87Yemen 447 06Zambia 6 09Zimbabwe 356 58Short description of Geary Khamis system editThis system is valuing the matrix of quantities using the international prices vector The vector is obtained by averaging the national prices in the participating countries after their conversion into a common currency with PPP and weighing quantities PPPs are obtained by averaging the shares of national and international prices in the participating countries weighted by expenditure International prices and PPPs are defined by a system of interrelated linear equations that need to be solved simultaneously The GK method produces PPPs that are transitive and actual final expenditures that are additive Inflation adjusting editWhen comparing between countries and between years the international dollar figures may be adjusted to compensate for inflation In that case the base year is chosen and all figures will be expressed in constant international dollars for that specified base year Researchers must understand which adjustments are reflected in the data Marty Schmidt Population adjustments In which case figures represent per capita monies Currency exchange rate adjustments In which case figures will be expressed in one currency unit typically US International or Purchasing power parity adjustments and or average commodity prices in which case figures are typically expressed as International Inflation adjustments in which case figures have been adjusted based on changes in an inflation index such as the consumer price index to represent currency for a base year such as 2000 Description of Geary Khamis system editSuppose PPPj is the parity of j th currency with a currency called international dollars which may reflect any currency however US dollar is the most commonly used Then the international price Pi is defined as an international average of prices of i th commodity in various countries Prices in these countries are expressed in their national currencies Geary Khamis method solves this by using national prices after conversion into a common currency using the purchasing power parities PPP Hence the international price Pi of i th commodity is defined as p i p i 1 q i 1 P P P 1 p i 2 q i 2 P P P 2 p i M q i M P P P M q i 1 q i 2 q i M displaystyle p i frac left p i1 q i1 rm PPP 1 right left p i2 q i2 rm PPP 2 right cdots left p iM q iM rm PPP M right q i1 q i2 cdots q iM nbsp This equation implies that the international price of i th commodity is calculated by dividing the total output of i th commodity in all selected countries converted in international dollars using purchasing power parities by the total quantity produced of i th commodity Previous equation can be rewritten as follows p i j 1 M p i j P P P j q i j j 1 M q i j displaystyle p i sum j 1 M left p ij rm PPP j right frac q ij sum j 1 M q ij nbsp This equation suggests that Pi is weighted average of international prices pij after conversion into international dollars using PPPj PPPj is by Geary Khamis system defined through this equation P P P j i 1 N p i j q i j i 1 N p i q i j displaystyle rm PPP j frac sum i 1 N p ij q ij sum i 1 N p i q ij nbsp The numerator of the equation represents the total value of output in j th country expressed in national currency and the denominator is the value of j th country output evaluated by repricing at international prices Pi in international dollars Then PPPj gives the number of national currency units per international dollar Advantages of Geary Khamis method editGeary Khamis international dollar is widely used by foreign investors and institutions such as IMF FAO and World Bank It has become so widely used because it made possible to compare living standards between countries Thanks to the international dollar they can see more trustworthy economic situation in the country and decide whether to provide additional loans or any other investments to said country or not It also offers some comparison of purchasing power parities all around the world developing countries tend to have higher PPPs Some traders even use Geary Khamis method to determine if country s currency is undervalued or overvalued Exchange rates are frequently used for comparing currencies however this approach does not reflect real value of currency in said country It is better to include PPP or prices of goods in said country International dollar solves this by taking into account exchange rates PPP and average commodity prices Geary Khamis method is the best method for comparisons of agricultural outputs Criticism of using 1990 US dollars for long run comparisons editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Economists and historians use many methods when they want to research economic development in the past For example if we take the United States of America and United Kingdom these two examples were compared many times in various researches someone may use nominal exchange rates Lindert and Williamson 2016 used PPP exchange rates and Broadberry 2003 used growth rates using own country price indices However none of them is somehow better than the others or theoretically justifiable There is a high probability that these three methods will give three different answers and in fact Brunt and Fidalgo 2018 4 showed in their paper that these three approaches do give three different answers when estimating output levels and growth rates in the US and UK and they are not only different to one another but also different to a comparison using the more theoretically justifiable chained GK prices Even though it is more theoretically justifiable it does not mean it should be used without considering every aspect of this method For example Maddison 2001 used the 1990 international dollar when he examined prices during the time of Christ Ideally we would use a price benchmark which is significantly closer to the time of Christ However there are no such benchmarks Another problem is that there is no set of international prices which we could use for valid cross country comparisons Comparing GDP levels across countries using their own prices converted at the nominal exchange rate has no value whatsoever This approach is quite arbitrary because the exchange rate is determined simply by the supply and demand for currency and these metrics are greatly dependent on the volumes of trade balances It makes little or no sense to value all goods both traded and non traded at the nominal exchange rate especially since the absolute volumes of trades may be small compared to total output in both countries Economists therefore create PPP exchange rates deriving the exchange rate by valuing a basket of goods in the two countries at two sets of prices and expressing them as a ratio afterwards This allows us to see how much it actually costs to live in said country Although with this approach emerges another problem What should we choose to be in the basket Brunt and Fidalgo 2018 use examples of an English basket in 1775 and Chinese basket in 1775 While the English one would have a lot of wheat the Chinese one would have a lot of rice Wheat was quite affordable in England and rice was quite affordable in China however if we switch these goods they both would be relatively expensive This nicely illustrates how choice of the content of the basket will influence the comparison Simply by using English basket China would seem like an expensive place to live and vice versa Geary Khamis tries to solve this by estimating a weighted average price of each commodity using the shares of countries in world production to weight the country prices Another problem emerges when researchers compare countries which have different price structure than the international price structure Brunt and Fidalgo 2018 show examples of Ireland which has really similar price structure to the international and South Africa which has really different price structure to the international So when using domestic and international price indices Ireland s growth rates move in very similar direction but when domestic and international prices are applied to South Africa they in fact move in opposite directions It is worth noting that bigger countries tend to have a price index that moves more similarly to the international price index It is simply because bigger countries have a bigger weight in creation of this index See also edit nbsp Economics portal nbsp Money portal nbsp Numismatics portalWorld currency World currency unit Special drawing rightsReferences edit International Dollar Geary Khamis Defined Examples Explained Business Case Web Site 24 February 2016 Retrieved 13 April 2019 What is an international dollar World Bank Data Help Desk Retrieved 13 April 2019 World Economic Outlook October 2022 imf org Retrieved 19 October 2022 Brunt Liam Fidalgo Antonio 13 December 2018 Why 1990 International Geary Khamis Dollars Cannot Be a Foundation for Reliable Long Run Comparisons of GDP PDF SSRN Electronic Journal doi 10 2139 ssrn 3292792 hdl 11250 2575366 ISSN 0804 6824 S2CID 158301926 Retrieved 17 November 2022 External links editHandbook of the International Comparison Programme Annex II Methods of Aggregation Statistical definition at the UN United Nations Statistics Division 2007 IMF Implied PPP conversion rate National currency per international dollar FAO Geary Khamis statistical yearbook http www fao org fileadmin templates ess documents publications studies statistical yearbook gearyKhamis pdf Brunt L Fidalgo A 2018 Why 1990 international Geary Khamis dollars cannot be a foundation for reliable long run comparisons of GDP Deaton A Heston A 2009 Understanding PPPs and PPP based national accounts https www princeton edu deaton downloads deaton heston complete nov10 pdf Schmidt M International Dollar Geary Khamis Dollar https www business case analysis com international dollar html Cuthbert J R Cuthbert M 1988 On aggregation methods of purchasing power parities OECD https www oecd org economy outlook 2002058 pdf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International dollar amp oldid 1169409411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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