Producers Price Index: September 2008 quarter

Technical notes

Price index interpretation

Price indexes are used to measure the changes in the level of prices, not the actual level of the prices themselves. The Producers Price Index (PPI) measures prices relating to the production sector of the economy. By comparison, the Consumers Price Index measures prices relating to the household sector, and the Labour Cost Index measures prices in the labour market.

The PPI is made up of two types of indexes: the outputs index, which measures changes in the prices received by producers; and the inputs index, which measures changes in the cost of production (excluding labour and capital costs). The Farm Expenses Price Index (FEPI) measures price changes specific to the inputs into the farming industry.

PPI outputs index

The outputs index measures changes in prices received by producers.

The outputs index covers the prices of:

  • primary products
  • manufactured goods
  • revenue from renting and leasing
  • the provision of services
  • capital work undertaken by own employees
  • margins on goods purchased for resale.

The outputs index excludes:

  • interest and dividends
  • royalties and patent fees
  • receipts from insurance claims
  • government cash grants and subsidies
  • goods and services tax (GST) and other indirect taxes.

These indexes are designed to measure price changes at a level corresponding to the prices received before the addition of commodity taxes or deduction of subsidies.

PPI inputs index

The inputs index measures price changes in costs of production, excluding labour and depreciation costs.

The inputs index covers the prices of:

  • materials
  • fuels and electricity
  • transport and communication
  • commission and contract services
  • rent and lease of land, buildings, vehicles and plant
  • business services
  • insurance premiums less claims.

The inputs index excludes:

  • wages and salaries (measured in the Labour Cost Index)
  • capital expenditure/depreciation (measured in the Capital Goods Price Index)
  • ACC levies, land tax, government licence fees, road user charges
  • rates
  • royalties, patent fees
  • bad debts and donations.

GST is excluded when measuring input prices for 45 of the 47 industry input indexes. The assumption is made that those involved in activities in these industries are 'registered persons, or businesses' that provide 'taxable supply'. GST paid on intermediate consumption is recoverable under the GST credit offset system and therefore is effectively not part of the ultimate input price. Exceptions include the finance, and the ownership of owner-occupied dwellings indexes, which include some 'GST exempt' and non-recoverable GST activities. Interest costs are excluded because they are regarded as a cost of capital and not as a payment for goods or a service.

Government charges are excluded when they are used to raise tax revenue rather than the payment for goods or a service purchased from the government. This is consistent with the System of National Accounts.

Farm Expenses Price Index

The Farm Expenses Price Index (FEPI) measures price changes of fixed inputs of goods and services to the farming industry. It does not fully measure changes in the production costs of farming. This is because production costs are not solely dependent on price movements, but are also dependent on factors that affect productivity, such as technological advances, management efficiency and climate fluctuations.

Capital expenditure and depreciation are not covered. (For price indexes of capital expenditure, refer to the Capital Goods Price Index.)

The Farm Expenses Price Index is now produced for the March quarter of each year only.

Coverage

The indexes are calculated quarterly from price quotes, which are collected mainly by postal survey. Approximately 13,000 individual commodity items are surveyed from about 3,000 respondents. Prices are generally collected each quarter, according to those prevailing on the fifteenth of the middle month of the quarter being measured. Prices may be obtained monthly or annually, depending on the nature of the item.

Calculation

The PPI and FEPI are Laspeyres base-weighted price index series. The weightings are determined by the relative importance of commodities and businesses within the industry or industry group. Information from various surveys and censuses and other sources is used to determine the weightings. Further information about this is available on request. 

Data quality

All care has been used in the surveying, processing, analysing and extracting of data for the Producers Price Index. However, all data are subject to possible statistical uncertainty. These variations may result, for example, from uncertainty introduced during non-response imputation, reporting difficulties for respondents, or errors made during processing survey results.

Statistics New Zealand adopts procedures to detect and minimise avoidable variation and eliminate errors, but they may still occur and they are not quantifiable. At higher levels of aggregations, much of the individual variability often cancels out. The PPI data have been checked for the published indexes, and also for underlying indexes, to identify any remaining uncertainty and detectable errors. These are corrected or re-estimated, where possible.

Ongoing work to redevelop, reweight and enhance price indexes has the potential to change the underlying indexes. Accordingly, these data may be subject to revisions in the future.

Industry classification

The PPI inputs and outputs indexes cover all the major market industry groups as defined by the Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification 1993 (ANZSIC). Index numbers for industry indexes based on this classification are available from the June 1994 quarter.

The all industries inputs index is made up of 47 industry indexes. Outputs indexes are not available for public administration and defence, education, health and community services, cultural and recreational services, and personal and other services industries, as reliable estimates of output prices have yet to be developed.

Customised price indexes

Statistics NZ has a large number of unpublished sub-industry and representative commodity price indexes. These indexes are available at a small charge to cover dissemination costs.

Back series of indexes

Statistics NZ will provide tables of the complete back series of the current PPI and FEPI indexes on request.

Price index development

The following is a detailed analysis of the output indexes affected by redevelopments that took place in the September 2008 quarter.

Fishing

The index in this publication that is affected by the changes is:

PPIQ.SUA07 – Fishing

Information used to redevelop this index comes from the Annual Enterprise Survey and companies involved in the industry. 

The only significant change since the industry was last redeveloped in 1997 has been a decrease in live, fresh or chilled fish that is sold, and a similar level of increase in prepared and preserved fish. This is likely to have occurred through a combination of classification and distinction differences between the 1997 redevelopment and now, and also through the decreased volumes of unprocessed fish that are now sold.

Output Commodity Weights for the Fishing Industry
June 2008 quarter
Commodity Weight (%)
Prepared and preserved fish 69.44
Fish: live, fresh or chilled 13.27
Crustaceans, not frozen; oysters; other aquatic invertebrates: live, fresh or chilled 11.94
Fishing services 2.58
Other 2.77

The 'other' group includes commodities such as non-financial intangible assets (ie fishing quota leases); and management consultant services.

Finance and insurance

The indexes in this publication that are affected by the changes are:

PPIQ.SUK – Finance and insurance
PPIQ.SUK01 – Finance
PPIQ.SUK02 – Insurance
PPIQ.SUK03 – Services to finance and insurance

Information used to redevelop this index comes from the Annual Enterprise Survey and companies involved in the industry.

Output Commodity Weights for the Finance and Insurance Industries
June 2008 quarter
Commodity Weight (%)
Financial intermediation services indirectly measured 46.81
Life insurance 8.46
Insurance and pension services 6.67
Commercial rent/office lease 6.36
Other property insurance services 5.04
Other 26.65

The 'other' group includes income earned from motor vehicle insurance, credit granting services, deposit services, health insurance, general liability insurance services, management fees, financial leasing services, portfolio management services, investment banking, securities brokerage and processing, other non-life insurance services, trust services and accident insurance.

Ownership of owner-occupied dwellings

The L02 ownership of owner-occupied dwellings output index has been redeveloped, with effect from the September 2008 quarter.

This affects index PPIQ.SUL02.

The ownership of owner-occupied dwellings index covers households which own their own homes, and which notionally rent them back to themselves. The index is therefore a notional index.

The changes made as a result of the redevelopment relate to reweighting only, based on the 2006 Census data. The representative commodities used for this index were reweighted to account for the increase in the number of rental properties in the three main centres (Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch) compared with the rest of the country; and to also account for increases in the numbers of one and two-bedroom rentals compared with three plus bedroom rentals.

There have been no changes in the output commodity weights since it was last redeveloped in 1997 because owner-occupied dwellings remain the only output. 

Computer services

The index in this publication that is affected by the changes is:

PPIQ.SUL04 – Business services

Information used to redevelop this index comes from the Annual Enterprise Survey, the Information Communication Technology Survey and companies involved in the industry.

The most significant changes since the industry was last redeveloped in 1997 have been the decrease in the demand for data processing services, and the growth in software maintenance and database services. These reflect changes in the organisation of business processes as well as the development and uptake of new technologies.

Output Commodity Weights for Computer Services
June 2008 quarter
Commodity  Weight (%)
Computer hardware maintenance and repair  28.27
Software maintenance  28.27
Computer consultancy  23.24
Database services  14.24
Recorded media   3.67
Other  2.33

Other business services

The PPI output index for other business services has been redeveloped, and takes effect from the September 2008 quarter. The index in this publication that is affected by the changes is as follows:

PPIQ.SUL04 – Business services

Information used to redevelop this index comes from the Annual Enterprise Survey and companies involved in the industry.

The most significant changes since the industry was last redeveloped in 1997 have been the increase in the demand for employment placement services, and the growth in other business activities such as call centre outsourcing services.

Output Commodity Weights for Other Business Services
June 2008 quarter 
Commodity  Weight (%) 
Management consultant services  21.46
Advertising services  20.18 
Other business services  17.68 
Placement and supply services of personnel  14.37 
Building-cleaning services  7.95 
Investigation and security services  7.66 
Other royalties (including copyrights, patents and brands)  3.53 
Market research and public opinion polling services  1.61 
Other  5.55 

For further information on the redevelopment, please contact Patricia Jennings at info@stats.govt.nz.

More information

For more information, follow the link from the Technical notes of this release on the Statistics New Zealand website.

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