UPDATE - The chart above has been updated to include data for December, showing the true CPI at just under 10%.
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If the CPI were still calculated as it was in the 1980s under Paul Volcker, it would show a very different picture of inflation than what is promulgated by Chairman Bernanke.
Source - Shadow Stats
The CPI on the Alternate Data Series tab here reflects the CPI as if it were calculated using the methodologies in place in 1980. In general terms, methodological shifts in government reporting have depressed reported inflation, moving the concept of the CPI away from being a measure of the cost of living needed to maintain a constant standard of living. Further definition is provided in our CPI Glossary.
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History of the CPI
By John Melloy
Executive Producer, CNBC's Fast Money
After former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker was appointed in 1979, the consumer price index surged into the double digits, causing the now revered Fed Chief to double the benchmark interest rate in order to break the back of inflation. Using the methodology in place at that time puts the CPI back near those levels.
Inflation, using the reporting methodologies in
place before 1980, hit an annual rate of 9.6 percent in February,
according to the Shadow Government Statistics newsletter.
Since 1980, the Bureau of Labor Statistics has
changed the way it calculates the CPI in order to account for the
substitution of products, improvements in quality (i.e. iPad 2 costing
the same as original iPad) and other things. Backing out more methods
implemented in 1990 by the BLS still puts inflation at a 5.5 percent
rate and getting worse, according to the calculations by the
newsletter’s web site, Shadowstats.com.
“Near-term circumstances generally have
continued to deteriorate,” said John Williams, creator of the site, in a
new note out Tuesday. “Though not yet commonly recognized, there is
both an intensifying double-dip recession and a rapidly escalating
inflation problem. Until such time as financial-market expectations
catch up with underlying reality, reporting generally will continue to
show higher-than-expected inflation and weaker-than-expected economic
results in the month and months ahead.”
Continue reading at CNBC...---
UPDATE - Congress is discussing changing CPI calculation again, this time to save as much as $220 billion over ten years...
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