English language

How to pronounce deflator in English?

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Type Words
Type of factor
Derivation deflate

Examples of deflator

deflator
The deflator more than halved to a 1.4% year-over-year rate from 3.2% previously.
From the businessweek.com
The government consumption deflator from the national accounts would be better.
From the economist.com
Its inflation rate, measured by the GDP deflator, is currently running at only 1%.
From the economist.com
The GDP deflator, the broadest indicator of price declines, slid 0.5 percent.
From the bloomberg.com
Agree on using cpi and not GDP deflator to measure real standard of living changes.
From the economist.com
The deflator is used to calculate economic growth adjusted for price changes.
From the bloomberg.com
Slower annual growth was last recorded by the domestic final demand deflator in 1997.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Kimberly's mother is a deflator, a person who sees virtue in pessimism.
From the us.cnn.com
The committee uses the same interpolated GDP deflator as discussed above.
From the usatoday.com
More examples
  • A statistical factor designed to remove the effect of inflation; inflation adjusted variables are in constant dollars
  • In statistics, a deflator is a value that allows data to be measured over time in terms of some base period usually through a price index in order to distinguish between changes in the money value of gross national product (GNP) which result from a change in prices and those which result from a ...
  • A factor applied to economic statistics in order to counter the effect of inflation
  • Difference between real and nominal Gross National Product, which is equivalent to the overall inflation rate.
  • A statistical factor used to convert current dollar purchasing power into inflation-adjusted purchasing power. Enables the comparison of prices while accounting for inflation in two different time periods.
  • An adjustment which turns nominal GDP into real GDP, by taking inflation into account.
  • The ratio of a nominal magnitude to its real counterpart. Usually refers, as with the GDP deflator, when the real magnitude has been constructed from underlying data and not by simply deflating the nominal magnitude by a corresponding price index, in which case the deflator itself may be used as ...
  • A price index used to produce a set of volume measures from a set of current values.
  • The price index, used to convert current prices of any economic variable into prices of some other period.