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MEASURING UK INFLATION

MEASURING UK INFLATION. Presentation to Civil Service Pensioners’ Alliance conference on price indexation November 23 rd 2010 Jill Leyland Vice President, Royal Statistical Society. Key points. Compiling price indices difficult and controversial

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MEASURING UK INFLATION

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  1. MEASURING UK INFLATION Presentation to Civil Service Pensioners’ Alliance conference on price indexation November 23rd 2010 Jill Leyland Vice President, Royal Statistical Society

  2. Key points • Compiling price indices difficult and controversial • UK Consumer Price Index does not have appropriate coverage for inflation uplift measure but • Retail Price Index methodology looks questionable; probably overstates inflation • What needs to be done

  3. Measuring inflation often controversial – in any country • People have different spending patterns • so different inflation experiences • Notice price rises more than price falls • Conceptual problems • Methodological issues • no single “right” way of compiling index numbers and • different approaches give different results

  4. Conceptual problems • Owner-occupied housing • Taxation • Quality changes • Movement in prices vs “cost of living”

  5. Constructing an index 1) Decide: • what items to include and their weight in the overall basket • base period (set as 100) 2) For each item: • collect prices from different outlets every month • calculate “average” % increase (or decrease) between base period and current month (calculation step 1) 3) Calculate weighted “average” percentage increase (decrease) for ALL items – (calculation step 2) But...

  6. How to calculate the “average”? Many methods – choice a matter of judgement. Most common for indices: • Arithmetic mean (two variations): add up the n items and divide by n • Geometric mean: Multiply the n items together and take nth root of the result Key point: assumption about degree to which people switch to lower priced items

  7. In the UK • Two different indices: • Consumer price index– originally called the Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) • Retail price index– long standing and familiar

  8. Consumer price index • Harmonised index to measure inflation in EU countries on comparable basis • Owner occupied housing left out; no agreement on treatment • Based on economic concepts… • Council tax, vehicle excise duty, TV licences, trade union dues left out • Low weight for insurance • Spending by overseas visitors included • Geometric mean at calculation step 1

  9. UK unusual name change • Originally called Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) • Name changed in UK in 2003 when made inflation target • UK unusual in doing this.Other countries call it HICP and use CPI for their main index

  10. CPI • Fine for macroeconomic purposes (eg inflation targeting, international comparisons) • But coverage not suitable for other uses including wage negotiations, pensions/benefits uplift etc • Geometric mean at step 1 assumes some degree of switching to lower priced items

  11. RPI • Covers most items in household budget inc mortgage payments; excludes some households • Uses arithmetic mean at step 1. • Assumes no switching to cheaper versions of same item • And for many items a form of arithmetic mean which tends to show higher inflation • Therefore probably overstates inflation Major changes to formula difficult due to index linked bond issue

  12. Differences: it’s not just housing • Treatment of owner occupier housing one difference but also others • Exclusion of other items from CPI, certain households from RPI • And the “formula effect” – impact of use of different means in calculation step 1 • Formula effect difference very important and always in the same direction so RPI will grow faster than CPI

  13. And the difference is: Reduction in interest rates during crisis

  14. But adjusting for formula effect NB: rough and ready adjustment

  15. What needs to be done • ONS must pay attention to all uses of price indices not just macroeconomic ones • In short term “CPI plus” should be created with coverage adjustments; different indices for different household groups • In longer term proper assessment of extent to which consumers switch to lower priced items; appropriate index treatment for different items selected • Where possible improvements made to RPI methodology

  16. Users must make their voice heard • Directly: ONS very willing to listen, about to carry out consultation on CPI/RPI but • Don’t always hear from users outside central government And also Statistics User Forum: • organisation for users (auspices of RSS, supported by ESRC and UK Statistics Authority) • developing full user engagement website • Interim site at http://sufenews.org.uk/or email suf@rss.org.uk

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