Among the several economic reports due for publication this week -- new home
sales, existing home sales, consumer confidence measures, durable goods orders,
preliminary estimate of fourth quarter real GDP, and ISM manufacturing survey
results for February, construction outlays for January, and the personal income
and outlays report for January-- the Fed's preferred inflation measure
will garner a great deal of attention. The core personal consumption expenditure
(PCE) price index, which excludes food and energy, advanced 2.22% in December,
representing a deceleration from the 2.44% peak seen in August. This improvement
is important because core inflation is heading in the direction of the FOMC's
comfort zone of 1%-2%. However, after the January Consumer Price Index (CPI)
was reported, there were concerns about the January core PCE price index because
it is largely based on the CPI.
The main reason for the anxiety is the fact that the sharp 0.8% increase in
medical care prices was responsible for 60% of the increase in the core CPI.
Although the PCE price is based on the CPI but there are several differences
in terms of scope and weights of components. Medical care expenses (weight
was 17.1% in 2006) in the PCE price index are roughly three times the weight
of medical care in CPI (weight is 6.28% in 2007 ). The inputs used for the
medical care component of the PCE price index are broader in scope compared
with the medical care price index in the CPI and part of the medical care
price information is obtained from the Producer Price Index. Historically,
the year-to-year change in the two price indexes show a strong positive correlation
(see chart 1)
Chart 1

However, in recent years, the two price indexes have diverged and their movement
is not as close as seen previously.
Chart 2

Therefore, it is not clear, if the core PCE index of January (scheduled to
be published on March 1) will show a large increase as implied by the core
CPI. Chart 2 shows that medical care prices are advancing at a faster pace
in the CPI compared with the PCE.