|
THE RETAIL PRICES INDEX OVERSTATES THE TRUE INCREASE IN THE COST
OF LIVING
Measuring prices and inflation is central to almost every issue
in economics: growth and productivity; government taxes and benefits;
budget deficits and debt; monetary policy; wage setting; real financial
returns; poverty rates; and the regulation of privatised firms.
Yet measuring the 'rate of inflation' - even defining what we should
mean by that term - remains one of the trickiest and oldest problems
in economics. In the latest issue of the Economic Journal, Laura
Blow and Ian Crawford of the Institute for Fiscal Studies look at
the question: how well does the Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure
the true increase in the cost of living?
There has been growing international interest in the question of
how well official consumer price indices actually perform in measuring
the true increase in the cost of living. In the United States, this
was given additional impetus by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's
calculation that if the US Consumer Price Index (CPI) was found
to have a bias of 1% per annum, then revising index-linked government
expenditure in line with this would save $55 billion after five
years.
An expert committee was appointed to investigate the extent of
bias in the CPI and their final analysis - the Boskin Report - concluded
that there was indeed an upward bias, of 1.1% per year. This seems
small but when compounded over time, it means, for example, that
after twelve years, the US national debt is increased by $1 trillion.
If the RPI were found to be biased upwards, then the implications
for the UK, one of the world's leading issuers of index-linked government
bonds, would be no less dramatic.
The RPI formula, like many official consumer price indices, holds
the basket of goods fixed for a period of time as prices change.
During this period, however, the basket of goods that consumers
actually buy may change, partly in response to these price changes.
Fixed-basket measures do not account for this. This usually means
that there is an upward bias in the fixed-weight price index compared
to the true change in the cost of living. Blow and Crawford's study
looks at the performance of the RPI formula over the period 1976-97
and finds that:
There is no automatic presumption that the direction of bias in
the RPI formula is either upward or downward.
In practice, the (non-housing) RPI formula has overstated the true
increase in the cost of living over the entire period by between
1% and 3%. This implies that the average annual rate of inflation
as measured by the RPI formula over this period was between 0.06
percentage points and 0.15 percentage points above the true increase
in the cost of living.
The (non-housing) RPI formula clearly overstated the true annual
rate of inflation in all but three years of the period.
Notes for Editors: 'The Cost of Living with the RPI: Substitution
Bias in the UK Retail Price Index' by Laura Blow and Ian Crawford
is published in the June 2001 issue of the Economic Journal. The
authors are at the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). Their work
was funded by the Leverhulme Trust, the Economic and Social Research
Council (ESRC) and the Bank of England.
For Further Information: contact Ian Crawford on 020-7291-4836
(email: ian_c@ifs.org.uk); or RES Media Assistant Niall Flynn on
020-7878-2919 (email: nflynn@cepr.org).
|