Dorbish-Bowley Price Index Calculator | डॉर्बिश-बाउले मूल्य सूचकांक कैलकुलेटर

Dorbish-Bowley Price Index Calculator | डॉर्बिश-बाउले मूल्य सूचकांक कैलकुलेटर

Dorbish-Bowley Price Index Calculator

डॉर्बिश-बोले मूल्य सूचकांक कैलकुलेटर

Calculate Dorbish-Bowley Price Index – arithmetic mean of Laspeyres and Paasche indices. Get detailed step-by-step solutions.

Commodity P₀ (Base Price) P₁ (Current Price) Q₀ (Base Quantity) Q₁ (Current Quantity) Action
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Dorbish-Bowley Price Index Formula:

\[ P_{01}^{DB} = \frac{L + P}{2} \]

Where:
\( P_{01}^{DB} \) = Dorbish-Bowley Price Index
\( L \) = Laspeyres Price Index = \( \frac{\sum P_1 Q_0}{\sum P_0 Q_0} \times 100 \)
\( P \) = Paasche Price Index = \( \frac{\sum P_1 Q_1}{\sum P_0 Q_1} \times 100 \)
\( P_0 \) = Price in base year, \( P_1 \) = Price in current year
\( Q_0 \) = Quantity in base year, \( Q_1 \) = Quantity in current year

Dorbish-Bowley Index Calculation Results
Dorbish-Bowley Price Index
0.00
0.00% Change
Laspeyres Index (L)
0.00
0.00%
Paasche Index (P)
0.00
0.00%
Complete Calculation Table
Commodity P₀ P₁ Q₀ Q₁ P₀Q₀ P₁Q₀ P₀Q₁ P₁Q₁ Price Change %
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Index Comparison Visualization
Step 1: Data Preparation
Step 2: Calculate Laspeyres Index (L)
Step 3: Calculate Paasche Index (P)
Step 4: Calculate Dorbish-Bowley Index
Step 5: Interpretation
Step 6: Detailed Analysis
Interpretation of Results
The Dorbish-Bowley Price Index is the arithmetic mean of Laspeyres and Paasche indices. It provides a balanced measure that considers both base year and current year quantities. An index value of 100 indicates no price change.

Dorbish-Bowley Price Index: Complete Guide

What is the Dorbish-Bowley Price Index?

The Dorbish-Bowley Price Index, developed by economists J. L. Dorbish and A. L. Bowley, is a simple arithmetic mean of Laspeyres and Paasche price indices. This approach combines the strengths of both indices while mitigating their individual weaknesses.

Complete Formula and Calculation

Dorbish-Bowley Price Index Formula:

\[ P_{01}^{DB} = \frac{L + P}{2} \]

Where:

\[ L = \frac{\sum P_1 Q_0}{\sum P_0 Q_0} \times 100 \quad \text{(Laspeyres Index)} \]

\[ P = \frac{\sum P_1 Q_1}{\sum P_0 Q_1} \times 100 \quad \text{(Paasche Index)} \]

Detailed Formula:

\[ P_{01}^{DB} = \frac{1}{2} \left[ \frac{\sum P_1 Q_0}{\sum P_0 Q_0} + \frac{\sum P_1 Q_1}{\sum P_0 Q_1} \right] \times 100 \]

  • \( P_{01}^{DB} \) = Dorbish-Bowley Price Index from period 0 to period 1
  • \( P_0 \) = Price of each commodity in the base period
  • \( P_1 \) = Price of each commodity in the current period
  • \( Q_0 \) = Quantity of each commodity in the base period
  • \( Q_1 \) = Quantity of each commodity in the current period
  • \( \sum \) = Summation across all commodities

Advantages of Dorbish-Bowley Index

  • Simple Calculation: Easy to compute as arithmetic mean
  • Balanced Approach: Combines Laspeyres and Paasche
  • Reduces Bias: Less biased than using either index alone
  • Practical: Useful when both quantity data are available

Comparison with Other Indices

  • vs Laspeyres: Uses both base and current quantities instead of only base quantities
  • vs Paasche: Uses both base and current quantities instead of only current quantities
  • vs Fisher: Dorbish-Bowley uses arithmetic mean while Fisher uses geometric mean
  • vs Marshall-Edgeworth: Different mathematical approach but similar balanced perspective

Mathematical Properties

  • Always lies between Laspeyres and Paasche indices
  • Does not satisfy factor reversal test
  • Does not satisfy time reversal test
  • Simple to understand and interpret

Frequently Asked Questions

Why use Dorbish-Bowley instead of Fisher’s Index?
Dorbish-Bowley is simpler to calculate (arithmetic mean) while Fisher’s requires geometric mean. However, Fisher’s is generally preferred as it satisfies both time reversal and factor reversal tests.
Does Dorbish-Bowley satisfy time reversal test?
No, unlike Fisher’s Ideal Index, Dorbish-Bowley does not satisfy the time reversal test. This means P₀₁ × P₁₀ ≠ 1 for Dorbish-Bowley index.
When is Dorbish-Bowley Index most useful?
Dorbish-Bowley is useful when you need a simple, balanced index that considers both periods’ quantities and when computational simplicity is important.
How does it compare to Marshall-Edgeworth?
Both are balanced indices, but Marshall-Edgeworth uses average quantities while Dorbish-Bowley uses arithmetic mean of the indices. They often give similar but not identical results.
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