To start, look at the evidence for rising house prices.
Figure 2 shows an index of ‘nominal’ house prices for six different countries, which correspond to where the households featured in Activity 1 live. By ‘nominal’, we mean actual house prices without any adjustment for the way the value of money changes over time because of changing (usually rising) prices.
Figure 2 is a line chart with each line representing the change in average house prices over the years in each particular country. The lines do not show actual house prices (in pounds, dollars, and so on). Instead, actual values have been converted to index values. See Box 1 for an explanation of index values.
An index shows the value of something (in the case of Figure 2, average house prices in each country) relative to a base value.
A time period is chosen as the base and this is assigned a value of 100. The value in every other time period is calculated using the change in the actual value relative to the actual value in the base period. For example:
In other words, index values tell you how the underlying actual values have changed relative to the base year.
In Figure 2, the base value is the average for 2010, so that’s when the index was 100. Index values for other periods that are below 100 mean that house prices were lower than the 2010 average; index values above 100 indicate that house prices were higher.
Allow about 10 minutes
Take a moment to study Figure 2 and then answer the following questions.
OpenLearn - Rent or buy? The challenge of access to housing
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