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July 21, 2006 Credible Inflation Data (for a change) |
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It is strongly in the interest of governments that inflation figures stay low, even if inflation itself is not low. An hour or so researching newspaper stories on "Google" should puzzle those who have read that UK inflation is - officially - running steadily on target at about 2.5%.
Inflation's moving target The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee has an inflation target of 2.5%. Previously inflation was measured using the 'Retail Prices Index', which was used consistently - so long as interest rates were falling. When rates rose again they quietly switched to focusing on RPIX, which excluded interest rates, and then reverted to RPI when rates turned down. This allowed the most widely reported inflation figure to enjoy - repeatedly - a one way ratchet of cyclically falling rates. The RPI includes neither houses nor retirement income, two of the biggest expenditures which most people have, and the cost of both of them were rising sharply through the 80s and 90s. The CPI Recently the Bank of England switched to the CPI, a European standard. It doesn't include houses or retirement income either. In fact it has an even more convenient mix of data, and consistently reports a lower inflation figure than RPI:
There is a pattern. The owner-occupied costs of plumbers and electricians have been increasing because of many extra costs imposed on their employers, like National Insurance Contributions and increasing Health and Safety costs. Council tax has been rising fast too. On the other hand because of increases in competition from no-frills airlines European air fares have plummeted. Cheating with the numbers Personal computers and cars are interesting too. The statisticians use 'hedonic' computation, which means that product improvement impacts the reported inflation figure. So a basic computer, which doubles in capability every 18 months, is computed as a halving of price even though the price of a basic family computer does not fall at all. In the same way a modern day BMW 7 series (£38,000) on any car criteria greatly outperforms a 1970s Rolls Royce (£50,000 then). The result is that in a statistician's spreadsheet luxury car prices fall steadily over 30 years. In fact a new Rolls Royce has risen from about £50,000 in 1970 to about £200,000, and a top of the range BMW by a similar percentage factor. Yet more exclusions It is getting increasingly silly. The new target is 'Core CPI', which excludes housing, its associated costs and taxes (mortgages and council tax), the capital cost of retirement income, and now fuel and food too! It seems improbable that savers will be impressed by this sort of selectivity indefinitely, unless they believe it useful to measure the purchasing power of savings only by comparison with the tumbling prices of imported Chinese clothing and electronic gadgetry.
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Regards, Paul Tustain is the founder of BullionVault.com - with 13,000 customers and $600m in gold bars, now the world's largest store of privately-owned investment gold bullion. Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events - and must be verified elsewhere - should you choose to act on it. Copyright © 2004 - 2009 Bullion Vault Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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