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A comprehensive guide to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), explaining how it measures inflation and impacts economic decision-making.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a key economic indicator that measures the average change over time in the prices paid by consumers for a fixed basket of goods and services. It is widely used to assess inflation, cost-of-living changes, and purchasing power.
Definition
Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a statistical measure that tracks price changes in a representative basket of consumer goods and services over time.
CPI is constructed using a predefined “basket” of goods and services that represents typical household consumption. This basket commonly includes:
Prices are collected regularly and weighted based on consumer spending patterns. Changes in the index show whether prices are rising (inflation) or falling (deflation).
CPI is often published monthly or quarterly by national statistics offices.
CPI = (Cost of Basket in Current Period / Cost of Basket in Base Period) × 100
Inflation Rate = ((CPI_current − CPI_previous) / CPI_previous) × 100
If the CPI was 110 last year and rises to 115 this year:
Inflation Rate = ((115 − 110) / 110) × 100 = 4.55%
This indicates that average consumer prices increased by 4.55% over the year.
CPI plays a central role in:
Businesses use CPI to adjust pricing strategies, budgets, and long-term contracts.
Is CPI the same as inflation?
CPI measures price changes; inflation is the rate at which CPI increases.
CPI measures price changes; inflation is the rate at which CPI increases.
Why is core CPI used by central banks?
It removes volatile food and energy prices to show underlying inflation trends.
It removes volatile food and energy prices to show underlying inflation trends.
Does CPI reflect individual household experience?
Not exactly—it reflects average consumption patterns, not individual spending habits.
Not exactly, it reflects average consumption patterns, not individual spending habits.