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Previously on "Inflation is only 2%"

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  • Tex
    replied
    Originally posted by ratewhore View Post
    The point is you can massage figures to prove any point you like. As far as inflation is concerned, it must be trickling through to even the red top readers now that the CPI is pretty much made up to suit a purpose...

    Absolutely, and far more eloquently put than my bus fare / EuroTunnel example. You could double the price of petrol and it would scarcely register in the CPI figures as it is only one item among hundreds of largely more price stable items.

    The fact that you buy petrol every week and only use the EuroTunnel once in a blue moon is neither here nor there as far as the official statistics go. Perhaps you should use your car less and the EuroTunnel more, then your personal inflation rate wouldn't be so high is the reasoning at the centre.

    Leave a comment:


  • ratewhore
    replied
    The point is you can massage figures to prove any point you like. As far as inflation is concerned, it must be trickling through to even the red top readers now that the CPI is pretty much made up to suit a purpose...

    Leave a comment:


  • Tex
    replied
    Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
    but is not the cost of transport going up? what is the inflation rate for each of those 4 above?
    You're not thinking properly, citizen. The cost of using the bus is falling, i.e. the cost of petrol/diesel is a relatively small part of the calculation of the cost of transport. Indeed it is three items (including engine oil) out of 30, which includes such things as the EuroTunnel fare, which is used by most people on a daily basis I'm sure you will agree.

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/mai.../cmbills07.xml

    Many of our biggest bills are soaring – the cost of food alone has risen by 17 per cent. Niki Chesworth explains how she managed to save all this and more

    Families face an average increase in household bills for water, gas, electricity and council tax of 8.3 per cent this year; a rise of nearly £200.

    The supermarket price of butter is up by more than 60 per cent over the year, free-range eggs by 40 per cent , cheese about 25 per cent and milk by 20 per cent.

    Some brands of pasta now cost 80 per cent more. Petrol is up 19 per cent on the year to January and car insurance premiums 6 per cent.


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  • BrilloPad
    replied
    Originally posted by Tex View Post
    There lies the answer then. Food only comprises 10.3% of the standard weekly basket. Higher allocations are given to:

    Recreation and Culture @ 15.3%
    Transport @ 15.2%
    Restaurants and Hotels @ 13.8%
    Housing and Household Services @ 11.5%
    but is not the cost of transport going up? what is the inflation rate for each of those 4 above?

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  • hyperD
    replied
    Originally posted by BrilloPad View Post
    How have Liebour managed this?
    Obfuscation, misdirection, repetition and sleight of hand. I'm beginning to think brown and bliar are Penn and Teller in disguise...

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  • DimPrawn
    replied
    What a crock.

    Leave a comment:


  • Tex
    replied
    Executive Summary

    Originally posted by ratewhore View Post
    Theres a report here. I can't be arsed ploughing through it...
    There lies the answer then. Food only comprises 10.3% of the standard weekly basket. Higher allocations are given to:

    Recreation and Culture @ 15.3%
    Transport @ 15.2%
    Restaurants and Hotels @ 13.8%
    Housing and Household Services @ 11.5%

    Of course as we all know inflation busting tax increases aren't included anyway. After all, they're not a real cost are they?

    The items added this year are:

    Olive oil
    Probiotic drink
    Courgettes
    Broccoli
    Sandwich on a train
    Can of pop from a vending machine
    Shower head (wtf?)
    Electric fan
    Credit card charges
    Mortgage fees
    Mobile ringtone download
    Diamond solitaire ring
    Toothbrush
    GPS system
    Flat screen TV
    DAB radio
    Non-Film Chart DVD
    Pack of Recordable DVDs
    Digital photo processing


    Removed were:

    Vegetable oil
    Brie
    Sprouts
    Pre-pack Vegetables
    Wellington boots
    Leather boots
    Sunglasses (non-designer)
    Glasses frames (designer)
    Gemstone cluster ring
    Portable TV (CRT)
    VHS Video Recorder
    Portable CD Player
    In-Car CD Autochanger
    Widescreen CRT TV
    Blank VHS Cassettes
    Pre-Recorded VHS Cassettes
    35mm Compact Camera
    Photo Developing
    Outdoor Plant Pots
    Digital TV Installation



    Interesting reading.

    Leave a comment:


  • BrilloPad
    replied
    I hope a broadsheet will do an analysis sometime - though electricals and clothes are going down, what about food, petrol, utilities going up?

    How have Liebour managed this?

    Leave a comment:


  • ratewhore
    replied
    Originally posted by rootsnall View Post
    What actually is in the basket of goods used to measure inflation ? It is beyond a joke at the moment that they can come up with a 2% figure. Looks like inflation is taking hold to me, time to start cranking up those interest rates.
    Theres a report here. I can't be arsed ploughing through it...

    Leave a comment:


  • rootsnall
    replied
    What actually is in the basket of goods used to measure inflation ? It is beyond a joke at the moment that they can come up with a 2% figure. Looks like inflation is taking hold to me, time to start cranking up those interest rates.

    Leave a comment:


  • MrRobin
    replied
    Ahh.. yes but think of all those HD-DVD players dropping rapidly in price! That obviously balances it all out.

    Gordon.

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    started a topic Inflation is only 2%

    Inflation is only 2%

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2008....interestrates

    Food prices continued their upward spiral last month, taking the annual inflation rate to 8.4%, the highest since detailed records began in 1986.

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