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Measuring Inflation

The MTUC, among others is calling for a more realistic measurement of inflation (excerpt): MTUC calls for a more realistic CPI benchmark PETALING JAYA: The working class is not able to cope with the rising cost of living because the percentage of wage increase is based on an unrealistic Consumer Price Index (CPI). Malaysian Trade Union Congress (MTUC) secretary-general G. Rajasekaran said most employers kept wage increases to a minimum 3% based on the unrealistic CPI figure furnished by the authorities. If this trend continues how can Malaysia achieve a high income nation status (by increasing per capita income from RM23,100 to RM45,500) within a decade? he asked. Rajasekaran said this in response to public complaints over the rising cost of goods and essential items. The Statistics Department announced last month that the CPI had increased from 111.5 to 113.2. Rajasekaran said the CPI figure given by the authorities did not reflect the actual situation on the ground, adding that information should not be suppressed because the Government needed realistic data when formulating policies. It is high time the Government commissioned an independent body to gauge the CPI. They must be truthful. They must capture the actual rise in cost of living, he added. Rajasekaran also said it would be a living hell if the Government revoked subsidies without putting in place a proper social security net. Advanced countries like United States still provided subsidies to farmers to keep the price of produce low. Advanced countries also have social security scheme in aid of unemployed folk. We do not have such scheme, he said. Rajasekaran also said most people resorted to taking loans from Ah Long to make ends meet, adding that it was a risk they were forced to take because times were tough. Theres no doubt that many have felt the pinch of rising prices over the last decade, as higher fuel and food prices have effectively reduced take-home pay. But saying that the CPI is unrealistic means that many dont understand how and why the CPI is constructed, nor do they understand what inflation actually is and how it relates to income.

The problem as I see it has a number of dimensions, the first being that the Consumer Price Index, like all price indices, is a composite number. You are trying to convey in one metric the level of prices across a whole range of very different goods and services, across the whole country. Just by looking at that construction, you can see how peoples experience of inflation can differ against its composite measurement someone in KL would have a very different view of how prices are moving, then someone in Pekan or Kluang for instance. Also, price increases in one category, can and often are counterbalanced by price decreases in another. That happens even within each category, as price increases in vegetables are somewhat ameliorated by price controls on rice, sugar and other staples. A further problem is that the weights used in each category of the CPI is based on the expenditure pattern of the average household, and these weights are periodically adjusted based on changes in that pattern. That means if your household expenditure priorities differ substantially from the average, youre going to have a very different viewpoint on inflation. On an empirical note, we probably have here the main reason why theres so much suspicion over the CPI measurement most lower income households spend a greater than average portion of their income on food and transportation, which is where most of the price increases over the past five years has come from (click on the pic for a larger version: CPI components, 2005=100):

The result is a rise in the CPI that doesnt seem to match what people are experiencing on the ground particularly since people only notice the effect of price increases of some goods, even as prices are falling or are stagnant for other goods. On that basis, its hard to say that the CPIs measurement of inflation is unrealistic. Creating a more realistic CPI wont do anything more than just spending money on something that isnt actually broken.

The last and most fundamental reason is that many people still dont understand what inflation actually is. The textbook definition is a rise in the general level of prices, which means that one-off price increases dont actually count much (e.g. if we introduce GST, the petrol price hikes in 2008) as they only induce a one-time increase in the price-level. This has the effect of reducing real incomes, but without increasing the rate of inflation. So what to do? Theres nothing fundamentally wrong with the CPI as it stands, and the current measurement is appropriate enough for policy purposes, if not for matching wages to cost of living increases. Rather than revising the CPI entirely, Id refine it in two ways: 1. Publish on a geographical basis. We already do this for Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah, and Sarawak, but we should also have separate CPI measurements for each metropolitan area as well Klang Valley, Penang, and JB. 2. Use alternate weights to model the inflation experience for different income levels. Rural consumption patterns differ from urban (greater weightage on transportation for the latter, for example), and blue-collar workers have different spending priorities than whitecollar workers. Using alternate weights can help account for these differences. Theres no way to perfectly match what people are experiencing on the ground with what the CPI is saying, no matter how you fiddle with it suiting the CPI to lower income groups inflation experience means it will be completely out of whack for everyone else. The refinements suggested here do no more nor less than match best practice elsewhere, and more happily, wont be that hard to put in place. Price data is already collated geographically, and the household expenditure surveys already capture differences in expenditure patterns between households at different income levels.

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