The United States Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a family of various consumer price indices published monthly by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The most commonly used indices are the CPI-U and the CPI-W, though many alternative versions exist for different uses. For example, the CPI-U is the most popularly cited measure of consumer inflation in the United States, while the CPI-W is used to index Social Security benefit payments.
The CPI measures the monthly price change of a basket of discretionary consumption goods whose price is borne by the consumer. There are eight major categories of items that are included in the CPI coverage; each includes both goods and services:
In line with this framework, the CPI excludes items such as life insurance, investment securities, financing costs, and house prices (though the value of owned housing, distinct from a house price, is included in the CPI), as these are considered to be investment items, not consumption. Also excluded are income and property taxes, employer-provided benefits, and the portion of healthcare costs paid by insurance plans or government programs such as Medicare, since these prices are not borne directly by consumers. [1] However, sales and excise taxes, [2] out-of-pocket healthcare costs, and health insurance premiums paid by the consumer (including Medicare Part B) are all included in the CPI, because consumers directly bear these costs. [3] Finally, the prices of illegal goods such as marijuana are not measured, and so are also excluded. [1] Some items, such as pleasure boats and pleasure aircraft, indeed belong in the scope of the CPI but are impractical to price; for these items, the price change is imputed to be the price change of a larger relevant category (eg. pleasure vehicles), while the weight is properly measured in the Consumer Expenditure Survey. [4]
The CPI-U measures inflation as experienced by a representative household in a metropolitan statistical area. Rural (non-metropolitan) households, farm households, military members, and the institutionalized (eg. prisons or hospitals) are excluded from consideration; with this exclusion, the CPI-U covers about 93 percent of the US population. [5] The items considered, prices collected, and the locations where the prices are collected are all designed to represent the spending habits of such households.
The BLS divides the urban population into Primary Sampling Units (PSUs), [6] equivalent to core-based statistical areas from the 2010 United States census. Prices are measured in only 75 of these PSUs. 23 of these CBSAs are known as self-representing PSUs, whose measured price changes apply to only that PSU. Of these CBSAs, 21 are metropolitan statistical areas with a population greater than 2.5 million (such as the Detroit-Warren-Dearborn, MI Metropolitan Statistical Area), while the remaining two are Anchorage, Alaska and Honolulu, Hawaii (which represent all of the CBSAs in Alaska and in Hawaii, respectively). These self-representing PSUs represent 42 percent of the CPI-U target population. The remaining 52 sampled PSUs are either metropolitan areas or micropolitan statistical areas; the price changes for all other PSUs are not measured in those PSUs themselves, but are imputed to be equivalent to the price change in one of the 52 sampled PSUs that is deemed to be equivalent. The clustering of all PSUs into equivalence classes is called stratification; nonself-representing PSUs are stratified using a variant of the k-means clustering algorithm, using four variables: latitude, longitude, median property value, and median household income. [7] Within each stratum, the actual PSU chosen to be priced was chosen randomly. By sampling both large areas (self-representing PSUs) and smaller areas (nonself-representing PSUs), the CPI-U sample represents the full urban population of the United States, including areas of large population (such as the Houston Metropolitan Area) and areas with small population (such as the Paris, Texas micropolitan area). [8]
Each month, BLS data collectors collect about 94,000 prices. For most items, these prices are collected by contacting the stores where the consumer purchases were made and measuring the price directly. This is usually by visiting the outlet in person (representing 2/3 of quotes) but sometimes via telephone or the store's website: as of 2017 about 8 percent of price quotes are taken from an online store, roughly in line with the fraction of consumer retail spending that goes through e-commerce. [9] Other specific items, such as airfares, are priced via alternative, industry-specific data sources. [10] Most prices are made on a per-unit basis, though some commodities such as gasoline or food items are priced by unit weight.
Some items are quality adjusted, meaning that the prices that are measured are adjusted to remove the change in price due to a change in quality or features of the item being introduced since the previous price was measured, a process called hedonic regression or hedonic adjustment. This is necessary in order to ensure that a constant, fixed item with fixed characteristics is being priced every period; when such an item no longer exists due to technological change in the consumer product landscape, a price is imputed using a new, existing product and estimating what its price would have been if it had the characteristics of the old product. Each category of quality-adjusted item is associated with a set of characteristics that are priced and a model for the marginal value of each of those characteristics. For example, the price of a smartphone is adjusted to remove (estimated) price changes due to the number of cameras, storage space, physical size, and other attributes of the smartphone. [11]
Beginning in 1983 for the CPI-U (and 1985 for the CPI-W), the pricing method for owned housing uses a framework called Renters' Equivalence. [12] Prior to this, the CPI would measure the price of homes, the cost of monthly mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, and maintenance. However, this method conflated the investment portion of owned housing (as an investment that was financed via all of those expenditures) and the consumption portion (the flow of services - ie. shelter - to the occupant household). In addition, new financial developments at the time meant that the data sources in the old method were becoming unrepresentative of consumers total costs of housing. For example, mortgages with shorter duration or variable rates, or financing at below-bank rates all were increasingly unreflected in federal data. The previous method was also unable to account for changes in quality of the sampled housing stock, while the CPI conceptual framework measures the price of a fixed-quality basket of goods. [13]
The current method instead measures only the rental payments for rented units, and for owned housing, imputes the rental equivalence - the monthly amount that the house would rent for, if it was rented out instead of occupied by the owner. First, rental payments are priced and adjusted for depreciation of the property (via the age-bias regression model). [14] Then, the "economic rent" is calculated, which adjusts for any changes in the structure or facilities. Finally, a "pure rent" is calculated, which removes from the economic rent the actual provision of utilities such as electricity and gas - these are measured in a separate index, to divide a rental contract's provided services between shelter and utilities provision. [15] Finally, the CPI for Rent measures the change in economic rents, because utilities are often provided in rental agreements; while the CPI for Owners Equivalent Rent (OER) measures the change in pure rents. [16]
For each entry level item (eg. apples in the Philadelphia metropolitan area) many different price quotes were made in each month. To aggregate these individual price measurements into an index for the item-location combination, a geometric means formula is usually used:
where is the growth rate of the index, enumerates all relevant price measurements that are present in both months, represents a fractional weight of the item as measured in a base period, represents the price of the item as measured in the current month, and represents the price of the same item as measured in the previous month. For some shelter services, some utilities and government fees, and medical services, a Laspeyres formula is used instead: where represents the price of the item in the base period. The geometric formula implicitly assumes that consumers exhibit substitution behavior among the various different quoted items (such as apples purchased from one particular grocery store versus another grocery store), whereas the Laspeyres formula does not assume such substitution behavior - indeed, the Laspeyres items are not considered to be exactly uniform or substitutable with each other, even if they represent the same category of item and in the same PSU. [17]
Each item is given a weight, used in the above formula, so that items that consumers spend more on are weighted higher (ie. with more importance) than items that consumers spend less on. These weights derive from the Consumer Expenditure survey, which collates how much money consumers spend on various consumption items. [18] The various CPI programs (such as CPI-U and CPI-W) are designed to represent different groups of US consumers, and typically achieve this goal by using a different set of weights, derived from a different segment of the Consumer Expenditures survey. For most programs, the weights are updated annually using the results of the previous years' Consumer Expenditure survey, though prior to 2023 data the weights were updated biennially (once every two years), and prior to the 1980s, the weights were updated approximately once per decade. [19]
Introduced in 1978, [20] the CPI-U is the most widely used CPI measure in popular media and understanding. Its sampling is designed to represent the consumption baskets of residents of urban and metropolitan areas, which collectively account for over 90 percent of the US population. [21]
The urban wage earner and clerical worker population consists of consumer units consisting of clerical workers, sales workers, craft workers, operative, service workers, or laborers. (Excluded from this population are professional, managerial, and technical workers; the self-employed; short-term workers; the unemployed; and retirees and others not in the labor force. [22] ) More than one half of the consumer unit's income has to be earned from the above occupations, and at least one of the members must be employed for 37 weeks or more in an eligible occupation. The consumer price index for urban wage earners and clerical workers (CPI-W) is a continuation of the historical index that was introduced after World War I for use in wage negotiation. [23] As new uses were developed for the CPI, the need for a broader and more representative index became apparent. The Social Security Administration uses the CPI-W as the basis for its periodic COLA (cost-of-living adjustment). [24]
A Core CPI index is a CPI that excludes goods with high price volatility, typically food and energy, so as to gauge a more underlying, widespread, or fundamental inflation that affects broader sets of items. More specifically, food and energy prices are subject to large changes that often fail to persist and do not represent relative price changes. In many instances, large movements in food and energy prices arise because of supply disruptions such as drought or OPEC-led cutbacks in production. This metric was introduced by Arthur F. Burns in the early 1970s, when food and especially oil prices were quite volatile, as an inflation metric that was less subject to short term shocks. [25] Today, however, the Federal Reserve targets the average level personal consumption expenditures price index, not Core CPI, primarily because it covers a larger portion of the economy and so is a more general measure of price inflation than the CPI. [26]
This index applies to the same target population as the CPI-U, but the weights are updated each month. This allows the weights to evolve more gracefully with people's consumption patterns; for CPI-U, the weights are changed only in January of even-numbered years and are held constant for the next two years. [27]
Since at least 1982, the BLS has also computed a consumer price index for the elderly to account for the fact that the consumption patterns of seniors are different from those of younger people. For the BLS, "elderly" means that the reference person or a spouse is at least 62 years of age; approximately 24 percent of all consumer units meet this definition. Individuals in this group consume roughly double the amount of medical care as all consumers in CPI-U or employees in CPI-W. [28]
In January of each year, Social Security recipients receive a cost of living adjustment (COLA) "to ensure that the purchasing power of Social Security and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) benefits is not eroded by inflation. It is based on the percentage increase in the consumer price index for urban wage earners and clerical workers (CPI-W)". [29]
However, from December 1982 through December 2011, the all-items CPI-E rose at an annual average rate of 3.1 percent, compared with increases of 2.9 percent for both the CPI-U and CPI-W. [28] This suggests that the elderly have been losing purchasing power at the rate of roughly 0.2 (=3.1–2.9) percentage points per year.
In 2003 Hobijn and Lagakos estimated that the social security trust fund would run out of money in 40 years using CPI-W and in 35 years using CPI-E. [30]
The Consumer Price Index was initiated during World War I, when rapid increases in prices, particularly in shipbuilding centers, made an index essential for calculating cost-of-living adjustments in wages. To provide appropriate weighting patterns for the index, it reflected the relative importance of goods and services purchased in 92 different industrial centers in 1917–1919. Periodic collection of prices was started, and in 1919 the Bureau of Labor Statistics began publication of separate indexes for 32 cities. Regular publication of a national index, the U.S. city average began in 1921, and indexes were estimated back to 1913 using records of food prices.
Because people's buying habits had changed substantially, a new study was made covering expenditures in the years 1934–1936, which provided the basis for a comprehensively revised index introduced in 1940. During World War II, when many commodities were scarce and goods were rationed, the index weights were adjusted temporarily to reflect these shortages. In 1951, the BLS again made interim adjustments, based on surveys of consumer expenditures in seven cities between 1947 and 1949, to reflect the most important effects of immediate postwar changes in buying patterns. The index was again revised in 1953 and 1964.
In 1978, the index was revised to reflect the spending patterns based upon the surveys of consumer expenditures conducted in 1972–1974. A new and expanded 85-area sample was selected based on the 1970 Census of Population. The Point-of-Purchase Survey (POPS) was also introduced. POPS eliminated reliance on outdated secondary sources for screening samples of establishments or outlets where prices are collected. A second, more broadly based CPI for All Urban Consumers, the CPI-U was also introduced. The CPI-U took into account the buying patterns of professional and salaried workers, part-time workers, the self-employed, the unemployed, and retired people, in addition to wage earners and clerical workers. [31]
In 1995, the Senate Finance Committee appointed a commission to study CPI's ability to estimate inflation. The CPI commission found in their study that the index overestimated the cost of living by a value between 0.8 and 1.6 percentage points.
If CPI overestimates inflation, then claims that real wages have fallen over time could be unfounded. An overestimation of only a few tenths of a percentage point per annum compounds dramatically over time. In the 1970s and 80s the federal government began indexing several transfers and taxes including social security (see below Uses of the CPI ). The overestimation of CPI would imply that the increases in these taxes and transfers have been greater than necessary, meaning the government and taxpayers have overpaid for them.
The Commission concluded that more than half of the overestimation was due to slow adjustments in the index to new products or changes in product quality. At that time, the weights for indices like CPI-U and CPI-W were updated only once per decade; today, they are updated in January of even-numbered years. However, even with this more frequent updates, the CPI-U and CPI-W might still be excessively slow in responding to new technologies. For example, by 1996 there were over 47 million cellular phone users in the United States, but the weights for the CPI did not account for this new product until 1998. This new product lowered costs of communication when away from the home. The commission recommended that the BLS update weights more frequently to prevent upward bias in the index from a failure to properly account for the benefits of new products.
Additional upward biases were said to come from several other sources. Fixed weights do not accommodate consumer substitutions among commodities, such as buying more chicken when the price of beef increases. [32] Because the CPI assumes that people continue to buy beef, it would increase even if people are buying chicken instead. However, this is by design: the CPI measures the change in expenses required for people to maintain the same standard of living. [33] The Commission also found that 99% of all data were collected during the week, although an increasing amount of purchases happen during the weekend. Additional bias was said to stem from changes in retailing that were unaccounted for in the CPI. [34]
Some critics believe however, that because of changes to the way that the CPI is calculated, and because energy and food price changes were excluded from the Federal Reserve's calculation of "core inflation", that inflation is being dramatically underestimated. [35] [36] The second argument is unrelated to the CPI, except insofar as the calculation of CPI is modified in response to a perceived overstatement of inflation.
The Federal Reserve's policy of ignoring food and energy prices when making interest rate decisions is often confused with the measurement of the CPI by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The BLS publishes both a headline CPI which counts food and energy prices, and also a CPI for "all items less food and energy", or "core" CPI. None of the prominent legislated uses of the CPI excludes food and energy. [37] However, with regard to calculating inflation, the Federal Reserve no longer uses the CPI, preferring to use core PCE instead.
Some critics believe that changes in CPI calculation due to the Boskin Commission have led to dramatic cuts in inflation estimates. They believe that using pre-Boskin methods, which they also think are still used by most other countries, the current U.S. inflation is estimated to be around 7% per year. The BLS maintains that these beliefs are based on misunderstandings of the CPI. For example, the BLS has stated that changes made due to the introduction of the geometric mean formula to account for product substitution (one of the Boskin recommended changes) have lowered the measured rate of inflation by less than 0.3% per year, and the methods now used are commonly employed in the CPIs of developed nations. [38]
In economics, inflation is a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy. This is usually measured using a consumer price index (CPI). When the general price level rises, each unit of currency buys fewer goods and services; consequently, inflation corresponds to a reduction in the purchasing power of money. The opposite of CPI inflation is deflation, a decrease in the general price level of goods and services. The common measure of inflation is the inflation rate, the annualized percentage change in a general price index. As prices faced by households do not all increase at the same rate, the consumer price index (CPI) is often used for this purpose.
A consumer price index (CPI) is a price index, the price of a weighted average market basket of consumer goods and services purchased by households. Changes in measured CPI track changes in prices over time. The CPI is calculated by using a representative basket of goods and services. The basket is updated periodically to reflect changes in consumer spending habits. The prices of the goods and services in the basket are collected monthly from a sample of retail and service establishments. The prices are then adjusted for changes in quality or features. Changes in the CPI can be used to track inflation over time and to compare inflation rates between different countries. While the CPI is not a perfect measure of inflation or the cost of living, it is a useful tool for tracking these economic indicators.
In economics, the GDP deflator is a measure of the money price of all new, domestically produced, final goods and services in an economy in a year relative to the real value of them. It can be used as a measure of the value of money. GDP stands for gross domestic product, the total monetary value of all final goods and services produced within the territory of a country over a particular period of time.
The cost of living is the cost of maintaining a certain standard of living for an individual or a household. Changes in the cost of living over time can be measured in a cost-of-living index. Cost of living calculations are also used to compare the cost of maintaining a certain standard of living in different geographic areas. Differences in the cost of living between locations can be measured in terms of purchasing power parity rates. A sharp rise in the cost of living can trigger a cost of living crisis, where purchasing power is lost and, for some people, their previous lifestyle is no longer affordable.
A cost-of-living index is a theoretical price index that measures relative cost of living over time or regions. It is an index that measures differences in the price of goods and services, and allows for substitutions with other items as prices vary.
A producer price index (PPI) is a price index that measures the average changes in prices received by domestic producers for their output. Formerly known as the wholesale price index between 1902 and 1978, the index is made up of over 16,000 establishments providing approximately 64,000 price quotations that the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) compiles each month to represent thousands of different goods and services.
The PCE price index (PePP), also referred to as the PCE deflator, PCE price deflator, or the Implicit Price Deflator for Personal Consumption Expenditures by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and as the Chain-type Price Index for Personal Consumption Expenditures (CTPIPCE) by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), is a United States-wide indicator of the average increase in prices for all domestic personal consumption. It is benchmarked to a base of 2012 = 100. Using a variety of data including U.S. Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index prices, it is derived from the largest component of the GDP in the BEA's National Income and Product Accounts, personal consumption expenditures.
The Producer Price Index (PPI) is the official measure of producer prices in the economy of the United States. It measures average changes in prices received by domestic producers for their output. The PPI was known as the Wholesale Price Index, or WPI, up to 1978. It is published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and is one of the oldest economic time series compiled by the Federal government of the United States.
In the United Kingdom, the Retail Prices Index or Retail Price Index (RPI) is a measure of inflation published monthly by the Office for National Statistics. It measures the change in the cost of a representative sample of retail goods and services.
The Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) is an indicator of inflation and price stability for the European Central Bank (ECB). It is a consumer price index which is compiled according to a methodology that has been harmonised across EU countries. The euro area HICP is a weighted average of price indices of member states who have adopted the euro. The primary goal of the ECB is to maintain price stability, defined as keeping the year on year increase HICP target on 2% over the medium term. In order to do that, the ECB can control the short-term interest rate through Eonia, the European overnight index average, which affects market expectations. The HICP is also used to assess the convergence criteria on inflation which countries must fulfill in order to adopt the euro. In the United Kingdom, the HICP is called the CPI and is used to set the inflation target of the Bank of England.
The Consumer Expenditure Survey is a Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) household survey that collects information on the buying habits of U.S. consumers. The program consists of two components — the Interview Survey and the Diary Survey — each with its own sample. The surveys collect data on expenditures, income, and consumer unit characteristics. In May 2020, the American Association for Public Opinion Research recognized the CE program with its 2020 Policy Impact Award, for joint work by the BLS -- including CE and the Division of Price and Index Number Research -- and the Census Bureau on the Supplemental Poverty thresholds and measure, and the essential contributions these data products have made to the understanding, discussion, and advancement of public policy related to the alleviation of poverty in the United States.
Core inflation represents the long-run trend in the price level. Measurements of long-run inflation should exclude transitory price changes. One way of accomplishing this is by excluding items frequently subject to volatile prices, like food and energy.
The employment cost index (ECI) is a quarterly economic series detailing the changes in the costs of labor for businesses in the United States economy. The ECI is prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), in the U.S. Department of Labor.
Chained dollars is a method of adjusting real dollar amounts for inflation over time, to allow the comparison of figures from different years. The U.S. Department of Commerce introduced the chained-dollar measure in 1996. It generally reflects dollar figures computed with 2012 as the base year.
This page lists details of the consumer price index by country.
The consumer price index (CPI) is the official measure of inflation in South Africa. One variant, the consumer price index excluding mortgage costs (CPIX), is officially targeted by the South African Reserve Bank and a primary measure that determines national interest rates.
In statistics, a deflator is a value that allows data to be measured over time in terms of some base period, usually through a price index, in order to distinguish between changes in the money value of a gross national product (GNP) that come from a change in prices, and changes from a change in physical output. It is the measure of the price level for some quantity. A deflator serves as a price index in which the effects of inflation are nulled. It is the difference between real and nominal GDP.
Shadowstats.com is a website that analyzes and offers alternatives to government economic statistics for the United States. Shadowstats primarily focuses on inflation, but also keeps track of the money supply, unemployment and GDP by utilizing methodologies abandoned by previous administrations from the Clinton era to the Great Depression.
The International Labor Comparisons Program (ILC) of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) adjusts economic statistics to a common conceptual framework in order to make data comparable across countries. Its data can be used to evaluate the economic performance of one country relative to that of other countries and to assess international competitiveness.
The United States Chained Consumer Price Index (C-CPI-U), also known as chain-weighted CPI or chain-linked CPI is a time series measure of price levels of consumer goods and services created by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as an alternative to the US Consumer Price Index. It is based on the idea that when prices of different goods change at different rates, consumers will adjust their purchasing patterns by purchasing more of products whose relative prices have declined and fewer of those whose relative price has increased. This reduces the cost of living reported, but has no change on the cost of living; it is simply a way of accounting for a microeconomic "substitution effect." The "fixed weight" CPI also takes such substitutions into account, but does so through a periodic adjustment of the "basket of goods" that it represents, rather than through a continuous adjustment in that basket. Application of the chained CPI to federal benefits has been controversially proposed to reduce the federal deficit.
For example, the CPI-U for the years 2004 and 2005 uses expenditure weights drawn from the 2001-2002 Consumer Expenditure Surveys.