Inflation Statistics: Best Ignored, Unless You’re Poor

There’s lots

of chatter today about the inflation

numbers, and whether we should care more about the headline number or the

core number – which wags like to call "inflation ex-inflation".

Just like any individual statistical datapoint, however, this one means very

little. The core rate of 0.1% is indeed low, but in fact it was thisclose

to hitting the market expectations of 0.2%. Meanwhile, the headline rate of

0.7% is indeed high, but headline inflation is incredibly volatile. In September

2005, it reached 1.2%, which presaged nothing except a negative reading the

following month.

Barry

Ritholtz and Kash

Mansori both have graphs up today showing core and headline inflation. They’re

both pretty volatile series, but the latter is clearly so volatile that a single

high datapoint must be considered all but meaningless. As ever, unless you are

paid to follow the market’s intraday gyrations, all such releases are really

best ignored.

On the other hand, it does seem clear that there is a significant and positive

gap emerging between headline inflation (which includes food and energy prices)

and core inflation (which strips them out). The gap is essentially a tax on

poverty.

The poor spend a much larger percentage of their income on food and energy

than the rich do, and they don’t benefit much from large drops in microprocessor

prices. If this gap is sustained going forwards, then the real income of the

poor is going to be eroded by inflation much more quickly than the real income

of the rich. Not that there’s much the poor can do about it. The rich, on the

other hand, have the Federal Reserve on their side, since the Fed targets the

core inflation rate.

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