What is the Actual Inflation Rate?
Is the Inflation Rate only the 3% that the Government says it is?
Here’s a wake-up call! Yes, another one!
The government tells us the inflation rate is currently 3.0 percent. That’s the Consumer Price Index increase for the 12 months ending in June.
Between January 2020 and last May, consumer prices rose 21.75 percent. According to government numbers, that is.
Sure. Biden is at the peak of his game. He’s never been better. And consumer prices have only risen 21.75 percent over roughly the last 4 ½ years.
Why do we find this number so incredible?
Simple. It doesn’t square with our experience or the experience of anyone we know!
One fellow posted a TikTok video showing a Wal-Mart receipt for a grocery purchase he made in 2022. The 45 items he purchased – he described it as a full month’s groceries – cost a total back then of $126.76. Because the app has a “reorder all” feature, he found that the same purchase today would cost $414.39!
Hello? Or as the fellow said himself, “Like, what?”
That’s an increase of 226 percent! In two years! For the same items!
Maybe Janet Yellen can deny experiencing sticker shock at the grocery store. She has a car and driver, and a private Fed dining room.
As off-kilter as the CPI is, the Fed prefers to use something called the Personal Consumption Expenditure Index to measure inflation. Jeffrey Tucker of the Brownstone Institute thought to ask an AI how that index is computed:
The BEA uses the same data that creates the quarterly GDP [gross domestic product] report, which measures U.S. economic output, but the PCE price index measures consumer purchases through different calculations. It converts the prices, which are still the producers’ prices, to the end price paid by the consumer. The PCE price index includes the broadest set of goods and services compared to other measures of consumer price changes. It measures changes in a basket of goods and services, but the PCE is based on data from businesses and trade organizations while the CPI is based on survey data from tens of thousands of consumers. The BEA normalizes the data via a price deflator—a ratio of the value of all goods and services produced in a particular year at current prices to that of prices that prevailed during a base year—to get the monthly PCE index: the average monthly rate of inflation (or deflation) for the U.S. economy as a whole.
Well, that’s one way to cook the books! There are others. Things like “core inflation.” Core inflation doesn’t include energy or food costs, although I’d like to see the cost of buying anything – anything at all – that doesn’t depend in some way on energy and food.
It’s all “lies, damn lies, and statistics” as Mark Twain may or may not have said. For us, the answer is to buy gold and silver to protect yourself from all the number fudging and money printing. And if you want to know what’s really happening to your cost of groceries, save your receipts.
Or get the Wal-Mart reorder app!