Determining the relative value of an amount of money in one year compared to another is more complicated than it seems at first. There is no single "correct" measure, and economic historians use one or more different indicators depending on the context of the question.
Most indices are measured as the price of a "bundle" of goods and services that a representative group buys or earns. Over time the bundle changes; for example, carriages are replaced with automobiles, and new goods and services are created such as cellular phones and heart transplants.
These considerations do not stop the fascination with these comparisons or even the necessity for them. For example, such comparisons may be critical to determine appropriate levels of compensation in a legal case that has been deferred. The context of the question, however, may lead to a preferable measure and that measure may not be a price deflator, which is used far too often without thought to its consequences.
Presented here are five indicators for making such comparisons in Spanish Pesetas (or Euros) between any two years from 1850 to 2007. They are the GDP Deflator, the average wage, the unskilled wage, the GDP per capita, and the GDP.
One or more of the indicators may be most appropriate for you depending on the nature of your query. See below for the definitions of the indicators and some examples.
You can make this computation among all the years between 1850 and the present.
Peseta or Euro?
In 2002, Spain changed its official currency from the Peseta to the Euro. Anyone with Pesetas could exchange them for Euros at rate of 166.386 Pesetas to one Euro. On March 1st of 2002, the Euro became the legal currency in Spain.
(Note that these are comparisons of the relative value of an amount of money,
and thus the last two are using nominal GDP.)
, "Six Ways to Compute the Relative Value of a Spanish Peseta Amount, 1850 - 2000," MeasuringWorth, 2008. URL http://www.measuringworth.com/spaincompare/
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