Croatia | GDP deflator (base year varies by country)
The GDP implicit deflator is the ratio of GDP in current local currency to GDP in constant local currency. The base year varies by country. Statistical concept and methodology: Inflation is measured by the rate of increase in a price index, but actual price change can be negative. The index used depends on the prices being examined. The GDP deflator reflects price changes for total GDP. The most general measure of the overall price level, it accounts for changes in government consumption, capital formation (including inventory appreciation), international trade, and the main component, household final consumption expenditure. The GDP deflator is usually derived implicitly as the ratio of current to constant price GDP - or a Paasche index. It is defective as a general measure of inflation for policy use because of long lags in deriving estimates and because it is often an annual measure.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Republic of Croatia
Records
63
Source
Croatia | GDP deflator (base year varies by country)
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
1981
1982
1983
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
51.67366805 1995
53.66470794 1996
57.36242599 1997
62.05329719 1998
64.23344532 1999
67.02068649 2000
69.85369149 2001
72.53905916 2002
75.6585133 2003
78.40486667 2004
80.84789584 2005
83.98496707 2006
87.57501447 2007
92.40146129 2008
95.15437276 2009
96.03859084 2010
97.64036552 2011
99.02733368 2012
99.76097403 2013
99.9081776 2014
100 2015
99.93878814 2016
101.10401166 2017
103.15473946 2018
105.2230755 2019
106.01312734 2020
107.61154012 2021
117.79512681 2022
Croatia | GDP deflator (base year varies by country)
The GDP implicit deflator is the ratio of GDP in current local currency to GDP in constant local currency. The base year varies by country. Statistical concept and methodology: Inflation is measured by the rate of increase in a price index, but actual price change can be negative. The index used depends on the prices being examined. The GDP deflator reflects price changes for total GDP. The most general measure of the overall price level, it accounts for changes in government consumption, capital formation (including inventory appreciation), international trade, and the main component, household final consumption expenditure. The GDP deflator is usually derived implicitly as the ratio of current to constant price GDP - or a Paasche index. It is defective as a general measure of inflation for policy use because of long lags in deriving estimates and because it is often an annual measure.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
Republic of Croatia
Records
63
Source