Examples of using Changes in relative prices in English and their translations into French
{-}
-
Official
-
Colloquial
These changes in relative prices are not inflationary.
Consumers prefer not to make any substitutions in response to changes in relative prices.
Changes in relative prices affect consumption expenditure.
But there is another feature of the world macro-economy that affects inequality: changes in relative prices.
Changes in relative prices lead to income and substitution effects.
It is not affected by substitutions that consumers may make in response to changes in relative prices.
Changes in relative prices are a normal feature of all market economies.
Without a floating currency,the Canadian economy would still need to absorb the effect of changes in relative prices.
Changes in relative prices also induce particular kinds of innovation.
Middle-income countries that are net importers of luxury goods could be negatively affected by such changes in relative prices.
Moreover changes in relative prices may severely affect some groups.
Second, its coefficients have been estimated over the sample period 1981-2009 controlling for the effect of changes in relative prices.
Moreover, changes in relative prices are not readily handled by this modeling approach alone.
When we say that changes in market prices reflect changes in scarcity,we are referring to changes in relative prices.
Generally speaking, changes in relative prices continued to favour non-tradables.
Voluntary labelling Regulator Stimulate and regulate consumption of manufacturing products orinfluence consumer behaviour through changes in relative prices.
Changes in relative prices can raise the demand by the private sector of clean technologies.
Thus, even when the general price level is stable, changes in relative prices require that some prices actually rise while others fall.
Changes in relative prices brought about by international trade are likely to influence these incentives and hence shape institutions Copeland and Taylor, 2009; Anderson, 2008.
This equation describes the equilibrium response of consumption to changes in relative prices and incomes affecting the individual's intertemporal budget set.
The bias is often described as‘substitution bias̓ because Laspeyres and Paasche indexes use fixed quantity weights anddo not permit substitutions in response to changes in relative prices.
Another point of structuralist criticism of neoclassical economics is the assumption of the infinite elasticity of thesupply of agricultural and primary product exports in response to devaluation-induced changes in relative prices.
Overall economic growth has slowed, butoutput per capita has continued to increase and, because of the changes in relative prices mentioned above, real incomes have increased even faster than real output.
These changes in relative prices will set in train a series of demand and supply responses that will affect the output of Canadian-produced goods, largely through their impact on exports and imports.
Comparisons over time, however, incorporate several effects:relative volume changes, changes in relative prices between countries and, possi- bly, changes in definitions and methodologies.
For the purpose of geographic market definition, the Bureau assesses buyers' ability orwillingness to switch their purchases from suppliers in one location to suppliers in another location in response to changes in relative prices.
The consumer would be able to reach a higher indifference curve by making substitutions in response to the changes in relative prices so that a smaller increase in expenditure would be sufficient to stay on the same indifference curve.
However, assuming that the relative prices of commodities change between A and B, it also follows that the consumer has the opportunity to increase his utility by changing his pattern ofconsumption between A and B to take advantage of the changes in relative prices.
Over the past three years, changes in relative prices, including the appreciation of the Canadian dollar, have contributed to a reallocation of labour and capital from the production of non-commodity tradable goods to the production of commodities.