Monday, June 11, 2012
McWages and PPP
Absolute purchasing power parity states that a good should cost the same
no matter the currency. Since labor is a good, it stands to reason that
labor should result in the same purchasing power across currencies as
well. New research by two economists, Orley Ashenfelter and Stepan
Jurajda, examines PPP-adjusted wages across different currencies. By
taking the cost of a Big Mac and dividing by the hourly wages paid to a
typical McDonald's employee in that country, the result is Big Macs
earned per hour. The research show that Western European and Canadian
McDonald's workers earn 2.2 Big Macs per hour, while Chinese and Indian
McDonald's workers earn only .6 and .4 Big Macs per hour, respectively.
These results indicate that absolute PPP does not hold across currencies
for labor. http://www.economist.com/blogs/freeexchange/2012/06/purchasing-power-parity