US CPI reports with corrected time scales. It's helpful to see how out of date the reported numbers are. [OC] Submitted by gatogetaway t3_zmpm6z on December 15, 2022 at 4:41 PM in dataisbeautiful 17 comments 53
rmm30 t1_j0cdrd9 wrote on December 15, 2022 at 5:00 PM Can you please add some explanation? For example, if the Nov CPI was +0.1%, why do you show that as < zero? I would have thought it’s approximately 1.2% annualized? Permalink 5 gatogetaway OP t1_j0cii18 wrote on December 15, 2022 at 5:30 PM You are right if seasonally adjusted numbers are used. However, the values are not seasonally adjusted because seasonal adjustments don't really apply (or shouldn't) to YOY numbers, the focus of the chart. The main idea is the YOY numbers are well out of date by the time they're published and may not reliable indicators of the current state of prices. Permalink Parent 1
gatogetaway OP t1_j0cii18 wrote on December 15, 2022 at 5:30 PM You are right if seasonally adjusted numbers are used. However, the values are not seasonally adjusted because seasonal adjustments don't really apply (or shouldn't) to YOY numbers, the focus of the chart. The main idea is the YOY numbers are well out of date by the time they're published and may not reliable indicators of the current state of prices. Permalink Parent 1
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