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To: yard_man who wrote (192166)9/16/2002 12:54:47 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 436258
 
More cuts in the consumer price index

quote.bloomberg.com

that's about 2.0 percentage points nicked since the early 90s.

With the release of the July consumer price index in August, the BLS introduced a new ``chained'' CPI, which does away with a fixed-basket approach to measuring inflation and instead allows for the substitution of lower priced items for more expensive ones.

Some 30 percent of all government expenditures have a cost-of- living adjustment attached to them, so the new index, if approved by Congress for that purpose, would have a material effect. The old CPI rose 1.5 percent in the year ended July compared with a 1.1 percent increase for the chained CPI.

Foul Ball

It was the large budget deficits of the early 1990s that prompted the previous CPI retooling. The Boskin Commission, which was charged with examining the overstatement in the CPI, reported in 1996 that the index exaggerated inflation by 1.1 percentage points.

``From a policy and statistical standpoint, inflation is being kept down,'' says Joe Carson, an economist at Alliance Capital Management. ``But underlying pressures are going to build.''

Without the various CPI ``fixes'' over the years, which have depressed reported inflation, core inflation (excluding food and energy) is running at 3 to 4 percent, Carson calculates. ``We'd already be in a stagflation period if we didn't change the measure of prices.''

Inflation? Who's worried about inflation? Most folks think the applicable model for the U.S. economy is deflationary Japan.

also, Bond Bears Extinct

quote.bloomberg.com