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Explosive growth in recent years means prices haven't gone up since 2000.
An increase in the index means prices have on average increased.
"What do you mean Price is having some kind of fit?
Demand is still ahead of supply, which means prices have not declined.
If the current state of the supplier's market means prices are falling, point this out.
Sometimes there is a "rally," which means prices are rising.
Bad yields means price goes through the roof, and no one buys it.
That changed a lot of stuff, but for this thread, it meant prices dropped.
At the same time, the mean price of stereo receivers has risen 53 percent.
That means prices will go up, and we poor people can't afford any increases."
It also means prices will go up as those discount programs go away.
That means prices can go wild, more than for any other commonly traded commodity.
For consumers, it could mean price competition at a time when cable rates are skyrocketing.
Many baby boomers will also need to sell their houses to afford retirement, and that means prices should fall, whether in 2003 or later.
But that doesn't mean prices have to fall.
Yes but what choice do people have if restrictive practices mean prices are artificially fixed at a higher rate?
That does not mean prices will zoom, but it might alarm investors who have assumed inflation is dead.
Dr Cunningham said this meant prices would rise 'for the slightest reason.
That means prices must be stripped of unwarranted subsidies.
See my post above, inflation reducing doesn't mean prices reducing, just not going up as fast.
This means prices will have to rise or some mines will be uneconomic.
Other days see "profit taking," which means prices are falling because so many people were selling stocks, but it sounds so good.
This logic suggests that the geometric mean price formula understates inflation.
Increases are typically passed along to consumers fairly quickly, which means prices for gasoline and heating oil would rise sharply.
But for now, the market seems still to be in a tight trading range, which means prices could bounce back from this three-day swoon.