[MoF] Economic Indicators of eCanada: Day 4,109
Canadian Ministry of Finance
This is the next week of the Economic Indicators of Canada. This will be a weekly article outlining some of the economic variables and how they are changing in eCanada. It looks at the CPI, Median Wage and WAM tax.
The base prices were taken on Day 4,081.
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
The basket of goods being looked at for the typical eCanadian citizen per week to calculate the CPI is: 84 Q7 weapons, 2100 Q2 food, and 1 Q1 house. This is based on each citizen using a Q1 house non-stop, and using 1,200 energy per day for fighting, always using a Q7 weapon to fight. The base prices will be the prices of each good on Day 4,081.
The Cost of the basket on the base day was: $14,797
The Cost of the basket on Day 4,109: $16,716
This makes a CPI of 112.97, which leads to an inflation rate in eCanada of -3.11% over the last 7 days.
Causes
The cost of Q2 food went up by 3 cents, the cost of housing went down 200, and the cost of Q7 weapons went down 5.00 per weapon.
Median Wage
The Median Wage was 4041 cc on Day 4,102. On Day 4,109, the median wage had remained the same in eCanada at 1041. This represents an increase of 0.00% in the previous week.
The Median wage is determined by taking the top 5 wages on the eCanadian market and finding the median of them.
Causes
As regions of eCanada are taken by our friends in Training Wars, the job opportunities are put on other countries markets and leave ours. This will bring the more lucrative job offers into countries such as Romania, Serbia and Republic Moldova. As we return regions to ourselves, those lucrative job offers return to our own country job market.
WAM tax
The Work-As-Manager (WAM) tax on Day 4,102 was $14.24 per company.
On Day, 4,109, the WAM tax was $14.77. This is an increase of 3.75%
Causes
This increase was caused by an increase in the average wage in eCanada.
The next edition will be available on Tuesday February 26th, Day 4,116 of the New World.
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Comments
o7
Nice work! If I may suggest, maybe you could put the previous weeks in a table or chart (or both) or something like that so we can more easily see the trends over time.
While I would love to do that (Graphs are amazing at convey large amounts of data in a visual and easily comprehended way), I am unaware as to how to upload the graphs made on a google document or excel in a way that is also about to be added to an article. If you have suggestions, feel free to send a message or post another comment.
You may need to take a screenshot and upload it as a pic. Not ideal but doable, if you want to doable it.
Why sand is not available in Nunavut? How long this situation will remain?
So now Nunavut isn't even connected to capital. You could have told before free company movement that you won't pay any attention to company owners.
Nunavut has been Romanian for a while, receiving 100% full bonus in housing, as well as the rest of Romanian bonuses for production. Furthermore, as Nunavut returns to Canada in the coming days, it will again be enjoying nearly full bonus for housing production, as we aim to rent sand from another country. The rest of the bonuses will be what the rest of Canada has, which will be decent amounts
Thank you for the answer and sorry for my anxious comment. Romania missed sand for at least a week so it wasn't 100%. Romania's economic behaviour is completely incomprehensible and decreasing bonuses like this in peacetime seems to be unreasonable for me. So I just moved my house companies to Russia. But I hope Nunavut will return to normal and house producers will find predictable environment.