Earlier this morning, the Labor Department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics released the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) for September 2019:
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Predicted: +0.0% (unchanged)
Actual: +0.0% (unchanged)
- Change From 12 Months Previous: +1.7%
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Below is the CPI when food and energy are removed, also known as
core CPI:
Predicted: +
0.2%
Actual: +0.1%
- Change From 12 Months Previous: +2.4%
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The above, yellow-highlighted figures represent the seasonally adjusted, month-to-month change in prices for a specific group of goods and services that consumers buy, and is, therefore, a
very important part of the overall inflation picture for the country.
The "predicted" figure is what economists were expecting, while the "actual" is the true or real figure.
General categories that constitute the CPI are:
- Healthcare
- Housing
- Clothing
- Communications
- Education
- Transportation
- Food and Beverages
- Recreation
- Miscellaneous Goods and Services (grooming expenses, etc.)
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From Today's Report:
"...Increases in the indexes for shelter and food were offset by declines in the indexes for energy and used cars and trucks to result in the seasonally adjusted all items index being flat. The energy index fell 1.4 percent as the gasoline index declined 2.4 percent. The food index increased 0.1 percent in September after being unchanged in each of the prior 3 months.
The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.1 percent in September after increasing 0.3 percent in each of the last 3 months. Along with the shelter index, the indexes for medical care, household furnishings and operations, and motor vehicle insurance all rose in September. The indexes for used cars and trucks, apparel, new vehicles, and communication all declined..."
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Chart: Consumer Price Index (CPI) - September 2019 Update |
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Labels: consumer_price_index, consumers, cpi, disinflation, hard_data, inflation