|
Do you know who popularized the concept of "core" inflation? Fed Chairman
Arthur Burns. Back in the early 1970s, when both energy and food prices were
soaring, Burns needed a lower measure of inflation so that he could justify
not pushing interest rates as high as they should have been. (That was left
for Volcker to do.) So Burns asked his staff: "Who among you can find a lower
measure of inflation?" And core inflation was born. Similar to employer-subsidized
medical care insurance, the core concept of inflation was an accident of history
that has persisted. As the chart below shows, both all-items and core CPI inflation
are re-accelerating on a year-over-year basis. But core CPI inflation set a
new cyclical high in May at 2.44% while all-items CPI inflation has yet to
take out its September 2005 peak of 4.69%. I think that 4.69% could very well
remain the year-over-year percent change peak because the current level of
energy prices is not much higher than it was in the fall of 2005 and are likely
to be declining in the remainder of this year. But we may not have seen the
peak in core inflation yet.

The core culprit is that hitherto obscure component - Owner's Equivalent Rent
(OER). This is the implicit rent paid by the occupants of owner-occupied housing.
This implicit rent is estimated by sampling the actual rents charged on comparable
rental housing. Because the BLS accounts for gas and electricity prices elsewhere
in the Shelter component of the CPI, it subtracts from its OER rent estimate
the charges for utilities. So, price changes for gas and electricity are captured
in the all-items CPI, but not in the core CPI. Changes in the OER are captured
in both the core and all-items CPIs. OER is the highest-weighted single component
in the CPI, accounting for 23.4% of the all-items CPI and 30.3% of the core
CPI.
When the housing market was on fire and homeownership (a dubious term given
the leverage in residential real estate today) in America was hitting record
highs, rental units were going begging. This tended to hold down rent increases
and thus the CPI heavyweight, OER. Also, when natural gas prices were soaring,
these price increases were subtracted from rent increases, again holding down
OER increases. Of course, rising natural gas prices were reflected in the accelerating
all-items CPI inflation, but we have been trained to ignore all-items inflation,
again thanks to Arthur Burns. So rising homeownership rates and rising natural
gas prices had the effect of holding down the rate of increase in OER and thus
core CPI inflation earlier in the cycle.
But now that the housing market is cooling off and the relative demand for
rental units is rising, rents are increasing at a more rapid rate, which is
putting upward pressure on OER. Moreover, natural gas prices are falling. Subtracting
a negative, declining natural gas prices, from rents yields a positive increase
in OER. The counterintuitive and countercyclical behavior of OER goes a long
way in explaining why core consumer inflation is a lagging economic
process.
Like Arthur Burns, will Ben Bernanke ask his staff to come up with a new and
improved core measure of inflation? Core-plus, which excludes food prices,
energy prices and OER? I doubt it. Bernanke strikes me as more of a
straight shooter. Rather, he will bite the bullet and hike the funds rate on
June 29 by 25 basis points and word the announcement in such a way to indicate
that the FOMC is leaning toward yet another rate increase on August 8. This
will help establish Bernanke's credentials as a hard money man with the influential
editorial page writers of The Wall Street Journal. This will give Bernanke
the flexibility to pause at the August 8 FOMC meeting when it will be apparent
to all that real economic growth is in trouble (see section below on real retail
sales).
It is somewhat ironic that the inflation in house prices abetted by the Fed's
easy money policies indirectly held down core inflation earlier in the cycle
and the moderation in house-price inflation is indirectly contributing to the
acceleration in core inflation. In turn, this could force the Fed to tighten
us into a recession. Boom-bust cycles are created by the Greenspan approach
to monetary management. Ignore asset price inflation, which occurs early in
a cycle, and respond to flawed measures of goods/services inflation, which
occurs late in a cycle. Wouldn't it be better for the Fed to not target
any prices - asset prices, goods/services prices, credit prices (interest rates)
- but rather target the amount of credit it creates out of thin air so that
there would be no cumulative increases in any prices as a result of
Fed errors? The gory details of the CPI report are in the table below.

Real Retail Sales On Track To Contract In Q2
Now that we have the May CPI data, we can adjust yesterday's anemic May nominal
retail sales data for price increases. As you recall, nominal retail sales
in May increased by just 0.1%. Today's CPI report shows the commodities (goods)
component increasing 0.7% in May. Thus, CPI-adjusted May retail sales fell 0.6%
month-to-month after a 0.3% decline in April. Even if June price-adjusted
retail sales increase by 0.3%, real retail sales for Q2 are on track to contract at
an annualized rate of about 3%. This compares with annualized growth of 13%
in CPI-adjusted retail sales in the first quarter. Sure hope the economy is
equipped with traction control! Tomorrow, the Fed will release complete monthly
M2 data for May. The weekly data point to a monthly decline in nominal
M2. With the 0.4% increase in the all-items CPI, real M2 will also be down
for the month, which would mark the third consecutive month of declining CPI-adjusted
M2. But who wastes their time looking at real M2 growth? Only I and the Conference
Board, the folks who put together the LEI, do.
|
Paul L. Kasriel, Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust Company
Economic Research Department
Positive Economic Commentary
"The economics of what is, rather than what you might like it to be."
50 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60675
The information herein is based on sources which The Northern Trust Company
believes to be reliable, but we cannot warrant its accuracy or completeness.
Such information is subject to change and is not intended to influence your
investment decisions.
Copyright © 2005-2008 The Northern
Trust Company
Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2008
SafeHaven.com
« BullionVault.com
-- Buy gold online - quickly, safely and at low prices »
« Honest Money:
A History of U.S. Gold & Silver Currency -- by Douglas V. Gnazzo »
« Opinions expressed at SafeHaven are those of the
individual authors and do not necessarily represent the opinion of SafeHaven
or its management. Articles are available via RSS/XML. Please
visit RSSHelp for instructions. »
|