The CPI Is Underrepresenting Food Inflation By 40%: Here's The Proof

Swordsmyth

Member
Joined
Apr 14, 2016
Messages
74,737
The "muzzle" on reported inflation has policymakers and analysts perplexed.
As Joseph Carson, former director of economic research at Alliance Bernstein writes in his follow up to a "New Working Theory on Inflation", numerous economic explanations and theories have been offered, and policymakers are considering making changes to their operating price-targeting framework. Yet, before any decisions are made policymakers should consider all of the factors that could be keeping a "muzzle" on published inflation.
Here are two:
First, a little more than 20 years ago the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) introduced a number of new measurement techniques in the estimation of consumer inflation (see Boskin Commission). So the current business cycle, which started in 2009, is the second consecutive cycle in which these new procedures have been employed.
Statistical changes have been made to account for product substitution, a greater degree of quality changes in products and services and faster introduction of new outlets or ways in which people shop. The introduction of new variables in the estimation of inflation alters the pattern and at various times the rate of change as well.
Prior to their implementation, analysts and government statisticians estimated that the potential reduction in core inflation from all of these statistical changes would range from one-half to a full percentage point. Yet, all of those estimates were looking backwards and there is no guidance from the statistical agencies of the scale of the reduction in reported inflation after implementation.
Odds are high that the impact on reported inflation varies year to year, with some years at the upper end of range of estimate and others at the lower end. Nonetheless, to overlook the impact from changes in measurement would be shortsighted, especially since changes in consumer price of a few tenths of a percent or more do matter a lot when inflation is low, and readings below the 2% target could be misconstrued as a failure of monetary policy, which in turn "forces" the Fed to maintain an unnecessarily easy monetary policy, which results in asset bubbles and wealth inequality, when in fact the only applicable consideration is that the BLS and the Dept of Labor are measuring inflation incorrectly.
Second, research conducted by the Federal Reserve staff has found that the shift in the measurement of shelter costs two decades ago to only use only prices from rental market and exclude those from the owners housing market systematically removed the largest single "driver" of cyclical inflation, while it also simultaneously reduced the volatility in reported inflation.
The significance of these findings has not received as much attention as they should. Removing the largest single driver of cyclical changes in inflation means that reported inflation nowadays does not exhibit the same sensitivity to economic growth and interest rates, as was the case in previous cycles. Accordingly, one of the reasons why the trade-off between changes in unemployment and reported inflation has been so benign in the last 20 years is due to changes in price measurement.
The missed signal from housing inflation was readily apparent in the 2000s when core inflation peaked at a relatively modest 2.5% even though house price increases were recording double-digits increases. In previous business cycles in which house prices recorded gains north of 10% core inflation readings were two or three times higher. In the current cycle, house price increases have run ahead of rent increases, but not to same extent as was the case in the 2000s.
As Carson concludes, these findings strongly suggest that price measurement issues are important to consider when looking at trends in the reported inflation data. For all of the conceptual changes and measurement issues the key question policymakers should be asking is whether the "muzzle" on reported inflation still makes it a useful benchmark for the price-targeting framework. The fact that currently constructed published price measure miss modern day inflation in the asset markets strongly suggests policy may need a new working definition of inflation before they contemplate any changes to the price-target framework.
* * *
That's the theory. Now, courtesy of Bloomberg, here is a dramatic observation of the practical implications of erroneous inflation measurements, which suggests that the US government is under-representing arguably the most important aspect of the consumer price inflation basket, that of food, by as much as 40%.
When Bloomberg's Cameron Crise encountered the dataset that is used to compute elements of the CPI that is in turn used by the Fed to determine monetary policy (and more often than not, results in asset price bubbles) he decided to compare how this theoretical price compares to real world prices.
Ignoring such volatile series as cell phones or haircut prices, he instead focused on groceries, and specifically cereals and bakery products, "the kind where you can buy the same thing in every grocery store in the country." He notes that there are six components to this subindex:

  • all-purpose flour,
  • long-grain rice,
  • white bread,
  • wheat bread,
  • pasta
  • chocolate chip cookies.
Then, to figure out what the real world prices are (i.e. not the "extorionate prices we pay in greater New York"), he signed up for supermarket delivery services in Columbus, Ohio, and Murfreesboro, Tennessee, because "while they may not represent the exact national average, they nevertheless seem like a reasonable proxy for middle America."
Once the representative middle-America venues had been picked , a selection was made of an identical basket of six goods, converting them to a unit price per pound ala the CPI basket. And while the products chosen "aren't bargain-basement" value'' generics, they aren't premium foodstuffs either." The results, as Crise, notes, "were pretty compelling."
As the table below shows, the CPI is chronically misrepresenting the price of every product in the food basket, with the gap between the government "price" and the average real-world price ranging from 14% in the case of chocolate chip cookies, to as much as 64% for a pound of white bread.
Overall, in the specific case of cereals and bakery goods, the difference between the CPI price for the basket of six core food products, and the average price of the same products in Ohio and Tennessee, is a whopping 39%. This same execrise extended to all other goods and services in the basket would reveal a similar bias to misrepresenting prices to the downside relative to reality.
cost%20of%20cereals_0.jpg

Here again are the results, represented visually.
CPI%20difference.jpg

The critical problem represented above is that while the Fed believes that the CPI calculation is accurate, and thus Americans can be subject to far looser monetary policy as the FOMC believes they are paying far less, the reality is that monetary conditions have to be far tighter for reality to catch down with the BLS's woefully incorrect price assumptions.
And keep in mind, the example above represents what middle-America is paying. The prices for these goods along the east or west seaboard would be substantially higher, resulting in a far greater underpricing of reality by the BLS.
As Crise observes: "while there was one instance where the real world cost matches the bureaucratic estimate, for the most part food - or at least this kind of food - is a lot more expensive than the bean counters would have you believe."
And his conclusion: "perhaps if the Fed wants to see higher inflation, they should just send a few staff economists to the "social Safeway" in Georgetown."
For once, we actually agree with "MacroMan."



https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-05-25/heres-proof-how-cpi-underrepresenting-food-inflation-40
 
this is nothing new.. I think it was 1991 when they changed the 8 oz steak component to 8oz of ground beef under the premise that when times are tough the common housewife will change her grocery habits accordingly.
 
40 percent may even be slightly off . From the time Obama was elected to now , say a decade some items like bacon and sausage have probably increased over 100 percent .
 
Surely this is just a misunderstanding of how CPI works. [MENTION=17293]Zippyjuan[/MENTION] could you provide some clarification to help straighten things out?
 
The foods definitely seem 40% smaller than they used to be, or I just may be getting bigger. I was thinking I had alice in wonderland syndome but it might have something to do with the expansion of the universe after the big bang.
 
The exercise in the OP is a poor attempt to measure overall price inflation. It does not even look at price changes over time and uses way too small of a sample. All it shows is that some stores charge different prices for the same items. That is not a measure of inflation.

Ignoring such volatile series as cell phones or haircut prices, he instead focused on groceries, and specifically cereals and bakery products,

Food accounts for about eleven percent of consumer spending and thus is counted as eleven percent of the CPI. Flour products are a small segment of that so a bad measure of overall price inflation.

Different stores do have different prices and the CPI looks at tens of thousands of prices in all categories and across the country.
 
The exercise in the OP is a poor attempt to measure overall price inflation. It does not even look at price changes over time and uses way too small of a sample. All it shows is that some stores charge different prices for the same items. That is not a measure of inflation.



Food accounts for about eleven percent of consumer spending and thus is counted as eleven percent of the CPI. Flour products are a small segment of that so a bad measure of overall price inflation.

Different stores do have different prices and the CPI looks at tens of thousands of prices in all categories and across the country.

You know how I know you are full of shit, You know the whole Women's employment and workers rights is bullshit. When I was a kid moms didn't work because they chose to have kids instead- but they have turned the argument into women weren't able to get jobs. You wanna know why birth rates are so low but the economy is doing so good that both parents can work and the kids still can't afford college and they are paycheck to paycheck. When I was growing up one parent could work and the other one could work if they wanted to send their kids to college, now both parents have to work in order to feed the kids.
 
Last edited:
You know how I know you are full of $#@!, You know the whole Women's employment and workers rights is bull$#@!. When I was a kid moms didn't work because they chose to have kids instead- but they have turned the argument into women weren't able to get jobs. You wanna know why birth rates are so low but the economy is doing so good that both parents can work and the kids still can't afford college and they are paycheck to paycheck. When I was growing up one parent could work and the other one could work if they wanted to send their kids to college, now both parents have to work in order to feed the kids.

The employment rate is a measure of people looking for jobs. If you choose to stay at home and raise kids, you don't count in the unemployment figures. To count, you need to be unemployed and looking for work.

Food used to be about a quarter of a family's budget. Today it is about ten percent. People have found other things to spend their money on.

food.jpg
 
Last edited:
The employment rate is a measure of people looking for jobs. If you choose to stay at home and raise kids, you don't count in the unemployment figures. To count, you need to be unemployed and looking for work.

Food used to be about a third of a family's budget. Today it is about eleven percent.

Tell that to the DNC talking point where they say that men didn't want women to work because they were too stupid. This just means the public schools raise the kids, and they get all of the programming involved there.
 
Tell that to the DNC talking point where they say that men didn't want women to work because they were too stupid. This just means the public schools raise the kids, and they get all of the programming involved there.


My dad (a conservative) would not allow my Mom to work even though she had a college degree and wanted to. She was top in her class and extremely bright. Her place was in the home he insisted.
 
The employment rate is a measure of people looking for jobs. If you choose to stay at home and raise kids, you don't count in the unemployment figures. To count, you need to be unemployed and looking for work.

Food used to be about a quarter of a family's budget. Today it is about ten percent. People have found other things to spend their money on.

food.jpg

What about the California 4000 dollar rents?? They have raised rent constantly despite all of the economic booms artificially. The houses and land got sold to the banks for pennies on the dollar and now they raise rents on people living in apartment and mobile home parks because they can raise the rents on the houses to whatever they want.
 
What about the California 4000 dollar rents?? They have raised rent constantly despite all of the economic booms artificially. The housees and land got sold to the banks for pennies on the dollar and now they raise rents on people living in apartment and mobile home parks because they can raise the rents on the houses to whatever they want.

Supply and demand. Too many people want to live there due to weather and high paying jobs. Homes don't sell or rent for high prices unless somebody is willing and able to pay that price.
 
My dad (a conservative) would not allow my Mom to work even though she had a college degree and wanted to. She was top in her class and extremely bright. Her place was in the home he insisted.

You were probably way ahead of kids where both parents were working all day intellectually and emotionally I would wager.
 
Supply and demand. Too many people want to live there due to weather and high paying jobs.

yeah but you gotta choose rent or food, they have all these subsidization of food costs and more and more homeless every day.
 
yeah but you gotta choose rent or food, they have all these subsidization of food costs and more and more homeless every day.

It is easier to live homeless where the weather is nice. You don't risk freezing to death at night in winter. All major cities have homelessness.
 
It is easier to live homeless where the weather is nice. You don't risk freezing to death at night in winter. All major cities have homelessness.

When I was a kid it was illegal when the MOB ran Vegas we had no homeless LOL.
 
It is easier to live homeless where the weather is nice. You don't risk freezing to death at night in winter. All major cities have homelessness.

Absolutely... Being homeless in better weather is a much better alternative to being homeless anywhere else...
 
They are everywhere. Just harder to see in some places.

Oh yeah I was joking there, we have a whole underground homeless city in Las Vegas. They always wash up when we have flash floods in the summer. I remember stories about people getting picked up for not having money in their pocket and being shipped off into other states. The mob didn't like people from other states coming here losing all of their money and then never going back home.
 
Back
Top