The Consumer
Price Index at 100: New Zealand History and Interpretation
Edited
by Sharleen Forbes and Antong Victorio
Very few New
Zealanders have lives unaffected by the Consumers Price Index, or CPI. It is
used by the New Zealand government to adjust student allowances, welfare
benefits and superannuation; by the Reserve Bank to guide monetary policy; by
the old Court of Arbitration, and by employers and employees, to negotiate
wages; and by the media to inform the public about the effects of price changes
on their standard of living.
Some authors in this book document the New Zealand CPI
as a history of conflicting machinations between unions, employers, public
officials and lobby groups. Others view it as a mirror of domestic social norms
and important international developments that eventually developed into a
beacon with considerable public trust. Still others emphasise its technical
evolution, from a crude selection of prices necessary for a just wage, to a
modern indicator of consumer satisfaction and economic management. Whichever
way you look at it, the CPI is a fascinating window into New Zealand’s social
and economic history.
On sale now, paperback $40.Victoria University Press.
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