Wednesday, June 22, 2011

More Fudge in the CPI Numbers

"You've been living in a dream world, Neo."
--The Matrix

As part of the federal budget talks, there is a proposal on the table to alter the way that the consumer price index (CPI) is calculated. Essentially, the proposed method would try to take into account the fact that consumers often trade down (e.g., go from steak to hamburger) when prices rise.

If passed, the alteration would make the 'headline' inflation number smaller.

Why is this on the table as part of the budget debate? Because a smaller inflation number would lower federal payouts (such as social security) that include cost of living adjustments. Viola! An instant $200 billion in budget savings.

This would not be the first time that the CPI has been dumbed down. There have been multiple changes to the methodology over the past couple of decades. The weird (criminal) thing is that when the goverment changes the method, they do not go back and alter the historical series. Those looking at historical CPI data are not comparing apples to apples (the same is true for unemployment, GDP, and other measures). If we were measuring the CPI the same way as in 1980, the headline inflation number would be nearly triple the currently reported level.

How such a practice is viewed as legitimate and is tolerated is beyond me. If I had tried to manage measurement systems like this during my industry days, then I would surely have been fired.

Make sure you understand the dynamic here. The federal government is printing money, which undermines the value of the dollar. Government officials are then supressing the metric that is supposed to reflect the dollar's value, effectively under-reporting reporting the inflationary consequences of their activities.

I continue to shake my head in disbelief at those people who see the widening income/wealth chasm as driven by 'big bad business', the private sector rich, et al. They fail or refuse to recognize the impact of government policies such devaluing the currency on real income inequality. Inflation guts the wealth of savers, and transfers it to those with political interests. Those at the bottom of the economic pyramid are hit especially hard in this regard...and the divide widens.

1 comment:

dgeorge12358 said...

What, then, is the real rate of inflation if the CPI is inaccurate? The truth is that there is no good way to gain a true measure of inflation, especially in this era when the Federal Reserve System is flooding the economy with new dollars. All we can say for certain is that inflation, with all its evils and distortions, has become what seems to be a permanent part of our economy.
~William Anderson, August 2001