Inflation: you hear the word all the time on the news. But what is it? Why does it matter? And how does it affect you? Here are the basics to help you understand it better.
March 8, 2016
Inflation: you hear the word all the time on the news. But what is it? Why does it matter? And how does it affect you? Here are the basics to help you understand it better.
In a nutshell, inflation happens when prices go up and people have less purchasing power from the same money.
As a result, when inflation increases, their purchasing power decreases because each dollar they have buys less (and fewer) real, tangible goods than before. For anyone living on a fixed or lower income, inflation is of particular concern.
The hardest part of measuring inflation is establishing prices to use for the formula. National statistics agencies usually measure various inflation rates:
The Raw Materials Price Index (RMPI) – the so-called “crude goods” price index
The Industrial Product Price Index (IPPI)
The Consumer Price Index (CPI)
People often associate the Consumer Price Index (CPI) with inflation. But what exactly does it show?
The “core CPI” is the change in prices without the food and energy components, or “ex food and energy.”
Keep in mind that because prices can also vary across the country due to local market conditions, supply and demand, and transportation costs, Statistics Canada measures the CPI in each major urban centre to create an accurate sample by province and territory.
It then combines them on a weighted basis to create the National Canadian CPI Index.
The CPI is considered a fairly accurate reflection of the change in the retail price level in most modern industrial countries. That’s a good thing, because it’s used to index government pensions and benefits, as well as tax brackets.
Not only does inflation impact everything from our ability to purchase retail goods to the value of our pensions, it also potentially exerts an influence over job security and ability to maintain an economic livelihood. That’s why having an understanding of why prices go up and what impact these changes could have on the overall economic picture in the future is important.
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