- 25 Marks
Question
For your next presentation to the management team of your bank, you have been asked to explain the following:
(a) Explain, with reference to index numbers, any four of the following:
(i) Indices numbers – their uses and construction.
(ii) A expenditure index.
(iii) A price index.
(iv) The base period.
b. i) The key elements of a time series.
(ii) The uses of a time series for forecasting.
Answer
a (i) Index numbers are relative measures showing changes in variables (e.g., prices) over time or space, expressed as percentages relative to a base. Construction: Select base period (100), collect data, apply formula like Laspeyres (weighted by base quantities) or Paasche. Uses: Measure inflation (e.g., Ghana’s CPI), track economic trends; in banking, for adjusting loan rates amid BoG-monitored inflation.
a (ii) An expenditure index measures changes in total spending on a basket of goods/services, incorporating both price and quantity changes. Construction: (Current expenditure / Base expenditure) × 100. Useful for budgeting; e.g., banks track client expenditure patterns post-DDEP for credit risk.
a (iii) A price index tracks average price changes for a fixed basket over time. Construction: Weighted average, e.g., CPI = (Σ current prices × base quantities / Σ base prices × base quantities) × 100. In Ghana, BoG uses it for monetary policy, affecting interest rates.
a (iv) The base period is the reference time (set to 100) against which changes are measured, chosen for stability. E.g., Ghana rebased CPI to 2018; crucial for accurate comparisons in bank forecasting.
(Note: Marks allocated based on exam, assuming distribution to total 13 for (a) as per sum, but explained four.)
b i) Key elements of a time series:
- Trend: Long-term movement (up/down), e.g., rising deposits.
- Seasonal variation: Regular patterns within a year, e.g., end-year spikes.
- Cyclical variation: Longer fluctuations tied to business cycles.
- Random/irregular: Unpredictable shocks, e.g., COVID impacts.
Decomposition: Y = T × S × C × I (multiplicative model).
b ii) Uses in forecasting:
- Predict future values: Extrapolate trend/seasonals, e.g., forecast loan defaults.
- Identify patterns: For budgeting, like seasonal cash flows in Ghana’s agriculture-linked banking.
- Policy decisions: BoG uses for economic projections.
- Evaluate interventions: Post-policy changes, e.g., after recapitalization.
- Limitations: Assumes past patterns continue; in volatile Ghana (e.g., cedi depreciation), combine with other methods.
- Tags: Base Period, Expenditure Index, Forecasting Uses, Index Numbers, Price Index, Time Series Elements
- Level: Level 2
- Uploader: Samuel Duah