Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile,...

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Alternative Inflation Measures

Transcript of Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile,...

Page 1: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Alternative Inflation Measures

Page 2: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Comparison: core vs. overall

• Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks

• Core = excluding food & energy here; but research works on alternatives

Page 3: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 4: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 5: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Comparison across measures

• Examine GDP price index, PCE price index, CPI

Page 6: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Differences between measures

• Coverage (scope)– CPI: out of pocket spending of urban

consumers– PCEPI: prices of all personal consumption

expenditures in NIPA– GDPPI: price index of prices of all goods

produced in economy (70% of which is in PCEPI)

Page 7: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Differences between measures

• Weights:– PCEPI and GDPPI: weights updated every

quarter; based on business surveys (production measures)

– CPI: weights updated every two years; based on household surveys (out-of-pocket expenditure measures)

Page 8: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Differences between measures

• Revisions:– PCEPI and GDPPI: revised as time passes to

better reflect true weights across sample of businesses

– CPI: never revised, except for seasonal adjustment

Page 9: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Differences between measures

• Bias:– PCEPI and GDPPI: small bias because of

quality adjustment bias; around 0.5% for PCEPI and 0.4% for GDPPI

– CPI: larger bias because of quality adjustment bias and substitution bias; at least 1.0%

Page 10: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Differences between measures

• Examples– Housing prices are 15% of PCEPI, but 32% of

CPI (urban)– Medical prices are 20.5% of PCEPI, but only

6.2% of CPI (out of pocket)

Page 11: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 12: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 13: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 14: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

• GDPPI and PCEPI are revised; CPI is not

• That means the CPI is worse, not better

Data revisions

Page 15: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

• Policy implications: the Fed could be confused by initial data, as it was in 2003

Data revisions

Page 16: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Data revisions

• In 2000, Fed switched main variable for inflation to PCE price index (PCE inflation); in 2004 switched to PCE price index excluding food and energy prices (core PCE inflation); in 2007 it began using both

• Problem: these variables get revised• Issue: are the revisions large enough to

worry about?

Page 17: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Data Revisions

• May 2002: data show decline in core PCE inflation from 2.0% in 2000Q3 to 1.2% in 2002Q1

• Academic research on deflation and the zero bound are fresh in policymakers’ minds

Page 18: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Core PCE inflation rate from 1997Q1 to 2002Q1, as observed May 2002

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0

2.2

2.4

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002

Year

Infl

atio

n r

ate

(per

cen

t)

Page 19: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Data revisions

• Perhaps as a consequence of worry about low inflation, Fed drives real fed funds rate to negative levels for first time since early 1970s

• Fed adds phrase to FOMC statement that it worries about an “unwelcome fall in inflation”

• But: revised data by December 2003 show that inflation wasn’t declining after all

v=May2002 v=Dec20032000Q3 2.0% 1.7%2002Q1 1.2% 1.5%

Page 20: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Core PCE inflation rate, May 2002 and December 2003

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0

2.2

2.4

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002

Year

Infl

atio

n r

ate

(per

cen

t)

OBSERVED MAY 2002

OBSERVED DECEMBER 2003

Page 21: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Data revisions

• The Fed gets rid of the “unwelcome fall” language by May 2004. Revised data by August 2005 show Fed should have worried about an unwelcome rise in inflation

2000Q3 2002Q1v=May 2002 2.0% 1.2%v=Dec2003 1.7% 1.5%v=Aug2005 1.6% 1.8%

Page 22: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Core PCE inflation rate, May 02, Dec 03, & Aug 05

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0

2.2

2.4

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002

Year

Infl

atio

n r

ate

(per

cen

t)

AUGUST 2005

MAY 2002

DECEMBER 2003

Page 23: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Data revisions

• Policymakers need to understand revisions to inflation

Page 24: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Figure 5Four Quarter Inflation Rate in PPCEXInitial to August Revision and Actuals

-1.0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Date

Act

ual

s an

d R

evis

ion

s (p

erce

nt)

Revision

Initial

August

Page 25: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Figure 6

Revisions to Four Quarter Inflation Rate in PPCE and PPCEXInitial to August Revision

-0.4

-0.2

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Date

Rev

isio

ns

(per

cen

t)

PPCEX

PPCE

Page 26: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

• The chained CPI uses chain weighting to improve on the overall CPI

• It works, but to do so, it must be revised

• Data are final after two years

• Revisions cause problems for changing payments, as in Social Security

Chained CPI

Page 27: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 28: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.
Page 29: Alternative Inflation Measures. Comparison: core vs. overall Overall measures: very volatile, especially because of food & energy shocks Core = excluding.

Conclusions

• There is no perfect measure of inflation

• Fed uses multiple measures

• Using core inflation prevents overreaction to short-term shocks

• Fed should be aware of revisions

• The chained CPI is more accurate than the overall CPI