The Procurement Glossary » Price Index
Price Index
Spend & Analytics
Definition
A published measure tracking price changes for a commodity or category over time.
Explanation
Price indices (e.g. for metals, fuel or paper) let buyers understand and anticipate market movements, and underpin index-linked contracts where prices adjust automatically with the index rather than by negotiation.
Example
The supply contract ties resin pricing to a published polymer index, adjusting quarterly.
Related terms
- Benchmarking — Comparing prices, costs or performance against internal history, peers or the market to judge competitiveness.
- Index-Linked Pricing — A contract pricing mechanism where the price moves automatically with a published index rather than by renegotiation.
- Cost Breakdown — An itemised disclosure of the components that make up a supplier's price, such as materials, labour, freight, overhead and margin.
- Spend Analysis — The process of collecting, cleaning, classifying and analysing purchasing data to understand what an organisation buys, from whom and for how much.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Price Index?
A published measure tracking price changes for a commodity or category over time. Price indices (e.g. for metals, fuel or paper) let buyers understand and anticipate market movements, and underpin index-linked contracts where prices adjust automatically with the index rather than by negotiation.
Can you give an example of Price Index?
The supply contract ties resin pricing to a published polymer index, adjusting quarterly.
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