Okay, here's our first economics thread: What's the validity of The Economist's "Big Mac Index"
Quick intro: Relative economic value in different countries is hard to measure. The reason that the dollar is worth 1.3 euros is mostly based on analysts feeding information to currency traders based on looking at "typical baskets of goods" that could be obtained in different locations in the local currency (the "goods" typically also include cost of labor if you're wondering). This is what's used to figure out "rich economies" from poor ones as well. Now these "baskets" are pretty arbitrary. Everyone has a different one, and in some "controlled economies" (e.g. China), the numbers are heavily manipulated by the government. Thus, the only thing that you can really analyze is what pops out of currency trading markets, and most economists agree that while heavily arbitraged (markets of independent traders tend to fully assimilate and average out all available information), these numbers have enormous anomalies, and result in countries like China showing much larger growth rates that they probably actually have.
Several years ago, The Economist magazine, half in jest came out with a "Big Mac Index" (see
http://www.economist.com/markets/bigmac/ for the full background and the most recent indexes). The basic idea was that Big Macs are the same everywhere, involve a basket of goods (beef, lettuce, sesame seeds, paper, various kinds of labor, etc), and are traded widely enough to incorporate all sorts of variations that can bias "basket of goods" approaches.
This joke turned out to be much more, as various people investigated it, correllated it to other data, and found that, sure 'nuff, this thing actually works! So the Economist regularly updates it.
Now lots of people have complained about this as not being comprehensive (You will not find too many McDonalds in Mali or Laos), and it only reflects a specific band of service labor that completely misses strong high-end service economies (the US and Western Europe) and low-end service economies (China, Malaysia, Indonesia for example which now produce most of the world's textiles).
Two possible tangents for discussion:
1) What else is wrong with this index?
2) Can you think of any other popular items that might be worthy of an index?
Cheers,
Buffy