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May 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Measuring and Detecting Inflation
Introduction
The past couple of years have been
challenging times for monetary policy makers. Inflation and
unemployment rates have fallen to levels not seen in thirty
years. Output growth has exceeded all expectations, making
the U.S. economy the envy of the world. There is an active
debate about whether the economy has entered a new era, one
in which the conventional wisdoms that have guided macroeconomic
policy for so long cease to apply. Some argue that the Fed
has been too slow to respond to incipient inflation pressures,
contributing to imbalances that threaten to bring the current
expansion to an end with a crash. Others argue that the computer
revolution has raised the economy's growth potential, allowing
the Fed to pursue a low interest rate policy for longer than
might otherwise be the case.
In arguing for the latter view, President
McTeer has asserted that the best place to look for inflation
is in the inflation statistics. In my presentation this morning
I want to give you some background on how exactly inflation
comes to be manifested in the inflation statistics. I will
review in some detail two of the major inflation measures
used as inputs in the policy making process, the Consumer
Price Index (CPI) and the Personal Consumption Expenditures
Deflator (PCE) and explain the key differences between them.
I will also review the concept of core inflation, and show
you how headline and core measures have behaved recently.
Rates of Change of Selected Prices
In an economy as large and advanced
as that of the United States, where almost all economic transactions
take place on private markets, there are literally trillions
of prices agreed upon by buyers and sellers each day in the
course of doing business.
Figure 1 plots the price changes for
a select group of goods to give you some sense of just how
dramatic are the differences in the rates of price change
experienced by different items. In some years the price of
gasoline increases dramatically, in others it declines. These
movements primarily reflect political developments in the
Middle East and the ability of OPEC to restrain output.
Likewise coffee prices can show dramatic
swings from year to year. Crop failures in Brazil in 1994-95
and again in 1997–98 caused prices to increase by nearly
60 percent.
However, computer prices are driven
by the pace of productivity growth in the computer manufacturing
sector, and in recent years productivity has advanced at a
pace so rapid as to lead to average annual rates of decline
in computer prices of about 15 percent. In not one single
year over the past decade have computer prices increased.
By contrast, although it is difficult
to see in this figure, the prices of prescription drugs have
increased every year since 1991, and in some years at rates
in excess of the overall rate of increase of the CPI.
What Is Inflation? The Fed is not so
much interested in how any individual price is changing over
time as it is in how the price level is changing. The price
level is the average price of all goods and services purchased
over some period of time, for example, a month or a quarter.
The rate of inflation is the rate of change in the price level
from one month to the next, or one quarter to the next, and
is an average of all price changes occurring between the two
months or quarters.
It would be prohibitively costly to
try to measure every single price change that occurs each
month. Instead, government statisticians produce a variety
of price indexes that are designed to address specific questions
and that serve to guide discussions of monetary policy.
The oldest of the price indexes produced
by the government is the Producer Price Index, or PPI. This
index has been constructed since 1902, and measures the average
price received at the factory gate by U.S. producers for their
output. Analysts study the PPI report because it is the first
inflation statistic released each month. However, the PPI
is oriented primarily towards the goods-producing sectors
of the economy, limiting its usefulness as a gauge of overall
inflation pressures.
The most closely followed of the major
indexes is the Consumer Price Index, or CPI. The CPI measures
the rate of price increase experienced by the average urban
consumer in the U.S. A broader measure of inflation at the
consumer level is the so-called Personal Consumption Expenditure
Deflator, or PCE.
The broadest measures of inflation
are the deflators for Gross Domestic Product and Gross Domestic
Purchases. These measures provide the most comprehensive assessment
of what is happening to inflation in the U.S. economy. However
they are only available at a quarterly frequency, which limits
their ability to reveal in a timely manner information about
changing inflation trends.
In what follows I want to focus on
the measures of inflation at the consumer level. I have two
reasons for this. First despite some obvious limitations,
the CPI is the most closely watched of the government's inflation
statistics. It is used to adjust Social Security benefits
each year and a host of other expenditures. Many private contracts
are indexed to the CPI, and it gives us a good indication
of how inflation is affecting the average consumer. Second,
the PCE is probably the most accurate of the government's
inflation measures, yet does not seem to be widely understood
outside the community of economists and central bankers. The
PCE is the preferred inflation measure of Chairman Greenspan,
and if nothing else I would like you to leave this presentation
with an understanding of why this is. But before discussing
the competing merits of the CPI and the PCE, I would first
like to lay out some of the basic principles of price measurement.
Principles of Price Measurement
Given the impossibility of recording
every single price change, the choice of which prices to measure
is usually guided by posing a question that the resulting
inflation statistic will help us answer. For example, we might
want to know how much more money the average worker needs
this year to be able to buy the basket of goods he purchased
last year. If this is the question we want our inflation measure
to answer, then we can narrow the set of prices we look at
to those that impact household's budgets the most. We will
want to know how much the cost of food, housing, and apparel
has increased, and we will not be interested in how much the
prices of industrial machinery or iron ore have risen.
After it has been determined which
prices we will look at, the greatest challenge faced by statisticians
is to ensure that they compare like with like. If the collection
of goods and services consumed by the average worker stayed
fixed over time this would not be a problem. However, in a
dynamic economy, old goods are constantly disappearing, new
goods are always being introduced and existing goods are always
being improved.
At the most basic level, this requires
that we measure the price per unit of what the consumer is
interested in and not be fooled by differences in package
size. Paying $10 for a 5 ounce martini as opposed to $5 for
a 2½ ounce martini does not constitute a price increase.
A more difficult problem is controlling
for differences in quality. When new model cars are introduced
each year, the statisticians need to figure out how much of
the price difference between the new and old models reflects
quality improvements, and how much reflects inflation.
The final problem is to find some way
of combining the detailed price information into a single
inflation statistic. If we are interested in knowing how much
more income the average worker would need this year to maintain
last year's living standard, we will have gathered the prices
of the various goods and services that the average worker
buys. To summarize how these prices have changed, an obvious
strategy would be to look at the average price change across
all of these goods and services. An alternative is to assign
an importance or weight to each individual price change based
on the importance of that item in the household's budget.
The Consumer Price Index
The CPI is the most closely watched
of the major price indexes published by the federal government.
The CPI measures the average change over time in the prices
paid by urban consumers for a specific basket of goods and
services.
Each month Bureau of Labor Statistics
(BLS) field agents collect about 80,000 individual price quotes
from different retail outlets, doctors' offices, etc., around
the country. The choice of cities in which to collect price
quotes is determined by the distribution of the population;
the choice of outlets from which to collect prices is determined
by surveys of where households shop.
Because the focus of the CPI is on
the inflation experience of consumers, it only includes the
prices of business to consumer ("B2C") sales. The
prices of business to business ("B2B") sales are
not included.
The aggregate CPI number is calculated
by weighting the individual price series by the share of the
associated item in the expenditures of the average urban household
in 1993-1995. Because these weights are held constant for
long periods of time they become less representative of household
4 spending patterns. Goods and services that have experienced
less rapid inflation and have become more important in households'
budgets will be underrepresented in the index, while goods
and services that have experienced more rapid inflation and
have become less important in households' budgets will be
overrepresented in the index. The net effect is to cause the
CPI to overstate the true rate of inflation. Four years ago
the Boskin Commission, appointed to assess the accuracy of
the CPI, estimated that the use of fixed weights caused the
CPI to overstate inflation by about half a percentage point
a year.
Figure 2 shows the behavior of the
CPI over the course of the current expansion. We see the pickup
and decline in CPI inflation around the time of the Gulf War,
and the subsequent stabilization through the middle of the
decade. In 1997 and 1998 inflation declined further to less
than 2 percent, but has since reversed course. Three weeks
ago the BLS reported that in March of this year the CPI was
up 3.7 percent, the highest it's been since the summer of
1991.
The PCE Deflator
The other principal measure of
inflation at the household level is the PCE deflator. The
PCE deflator is not a completely independent measure of inflation
as it is built up from components of both the CPI and the
PPI.
There are two major differences between
the CPI and the PCE deflator. First, in terms of coverage.
The CPI is only supposed to be representative of the price
paid by urban consumers in the U.S. Thus it does not capture
prices paid by rural consumers. The PCE deflator, on the other
hand, is supposed to be representative of the prices paid
by all consumers, urban and rural.
However the crucial difference between
the CPI and the PCE has to do with how the individual prices
series are combined in the PCE deflator. Specifically, the
PCE deflator takes account of shifting spending patterns,
as opposed to the CPI which relies on spending patterns from
several years ago.
Recall that the CPI uses historical
information on spending to add up individual prices. This
means that as time goes by, goods that have become cheaper
will tend to be underrepresented in the aggregate numbers,
causing inflation to be overstated.
An alternative approach to combining
the individual price changes is to use current spending patterns
to add up individual prices. But this too has its problems.
By using weights based on current spending patterns, goods
and services that have become cheaper over time will be overrepresented
in the index, while those that have become more expensive
over time will be underrepresented. The net effect will be
to cause the index to understate the true rate of inflation.
The obvious solution is to somehow
use information on both this year's and last year's spending
patterns. By averaging measures that overstate and understate
inflation we ought to get closer to the true measure. This
is exactly what the PCE deflator does, and accounts in part
for its popularity with Chairman Greenspan as a measure of
inflation.
Here we see the behavior of the PCE
deflator over the course of the current expansion, along with
the CPI (figure 3). Note that both measures show roughly the
same trends in inflation over the past decade. They both capture
the acceleration prior to the Gulf War, the subsequent decline
and stabilization through the middle of the decade, the further
decline in 1997-98 and the acceleration since late 1998. Note
also that the PCE measure of inflation is almost always less
than the CPI.
Measures of Core Inflation
So far I have talked about the headline
measures of inflation. There are also a number of measures
of what is termed "core" inflation constructed by
the federal statistical agencies (and others) and used as
inputs to the policy making process. Core measures strip out
price developments that are believed to contain too much noise
to be of any use in assessing underlying trends. A dramatic
run up in the price of some commodity that looms large in
households' budgets, but is likely to be reversed in the near
future, probably does not tell us a lot about whether the
underlying inflation picture has changed.
The best known of the core measures
are the so-called Ex. Food and Energy measures, which are
identical in all respects to the headline measures except
that they exclude the prices of food and energy commodities.
That is, the core measure is constructed by assigning zero
weight or importance to price developments in the food and
energy categories. This practice began in the 1970s when the
industrial economies experienced large oil and agricultural
commodity price shocks.
Another measure of core inflation is
the so-called median CPI. The motivation for looking at this
measure is that it may be misleading to always assign zero
importance to food and energy prices. Some months it may be
that other prices experience dramatic movements that bear
no relationship to the underlying trend. So rather than delete
food and energy prices every month, the median CPI deletes
the biggest and the smallest price changes. The intuition
behind this measure is not unlike that behind the scoring
in ice skating competitions: the points awarded to each competitor
are an average of the points awarded by each judge, excluding
the highest and lowest.
Figure 4 shows the behavior of both
headline and core CPI inflation over the course of the current
expansion. Note that the measure of core inflation that is
based on excluding food and energy prices is a lot less volatile
than the headline measure. The deceleration in the core measure
after the Gulf War is more gradual than the deceleration in
the headline measure. In recent years the core measure is
more stable than the headline measure: it does not decline
as much in 1997-98, nor does it increase as much in 1998–2000.
The median measure is somewhat more
volatile than either the headline CPI or the CPI excluding
food and energy. Despite this, there is research showing that
the median may sometimes do a better job than the traditional
measure at detecting changes in the direction of inflation.
The government also produces a core
measure of the PCE deflator, based on the exclusion of food
and energy prices. However this measure is only available
on a quarterly basis. Figure 5 shows how this quarterly measure
of core PCE inflation compares with the monthly core CPI inflation
rate. Note that as with the headline measures, the core CPI
and PCE measures move in tandem over time. The core PCE rate
has been below the core CPI rate for the past seven years,
in some years by a significant amount.
Recent Developments
Recall that both the CPI and PCE
headline inflation rates show an increase in inflation in
recent years. This increase in inflation is not peculiar to
these particular measures of inflation: if we were to look
at narrower measures such as the PPI, or broader measures
such as the Gross Domestic Product deflator or the Gross Domestic
Purchases deflator, we would see the same thing. Some have
argued that this development should be discounted as it primarily
reflects the recent run up in oil prices and that the best
gauge of inflation for monetary policy purposes is the core
rate.
If we look at how the core measures
have evolved over the past two years we do see a deteriorating
situation, albeit much less dramatic than in the headline
numbers. The CPI excluding food and energy and the median
CPI have been surprisingly stable over most of this period,
but both do show noticeable upticks in recent months. The
deterioration in the core PCE is less evident, although it
too has been drifting upwards gradually since the beginning
of 1998 (from 1.2 percent in 1998:II to 1.6 percent in 2000:I).
If we were to look at the broadest measures of core, the picture
would be slightly worse, with both the Gross Domestic Product
and Gross Domestic Purchases deflators excluding food and
energy increasing from rates of increase at or below 1.0 percent
at the beginning of 1998 to rates of increase in excess of
2.0 percent recently.
Conclusions
The CPI and the PCE deflator are
probably the two most important gauges of inflation for monetary
policy purposes. Neither measure provides a complete picture
of what is happening with inflation, so we always need to
look to the other statistics to confirm our assessment of
what is going on. At a minimum, we need to take account of
what the core measures are telling us, but it is also important
to look to both the narrower measures (such as the PPI) and
the broader measures (such as the Gross Domestic Product and
Gross Domestic Purchases deflators) to complete the picture.
All measures of inflation have shown
an increase in the inflation rate since 1998, in some cases
by as much as one or two percentage points. To an important
extent, these swings in inflation reflect the fact that oil
prices were declining in 1997 and 1998, but over the past
year have been rising. If we net out the effects of the oil
price increases, the pick up in inflation is less dramatic
and more recent. When headline inflation, whatever its proximate
cause, begins to seep through to core inflation and more importantly,
inflation expectations, the risks become very real that the
inflationary process will take on a life of its own. Once
the inflation genie is out of the bottle, it can be very difficult
to get it back in. The current trajectory of interest rate
policy is designed to prevent just such an occurrence.
—Mark A. Wynne
| About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by Mark A. Wynne, policy advisor
and research officer, Research Department, Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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