Economic Indicators GDP CPI PPI
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U.S. Economic Indicators
• Index
• Auto and Truck Sales
• Business Inventories
• Chicago PMI
• Conference Board Consumer Confidence
• Construction Spending
• Consumer Credit
• CPI: Consumer Price Index
• Durable Goods Orders
• Employment Cost Index
• Existing Home Sales
• Export/Import Prices
• Factory Orders
• GDP: Gross Domestic Product
• Housing Starts and Building Permits
• Industrial Production
• Initial Claims
• International Trade
• Leading Indicators
• Money Supply
• NAPM: National Association of Purchasing Managers
• New Home Sales
• Non-Manufacturing NAPM
• Personal Income and Consumption
• Philadelphia Fed Index
• PPI: Producer Price Index
• Productivity and Costs
• Regional Manufacturing Surveys
• Retail Sales
• The Employment Report
• Treasury Budget
• University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index
• Weekly Chain Store Sales
• Wholesale Trade
CPI: Consumer Price Index
 
  • Importance (A-F): This release merits a B+.
  • Source: Bureau of Labor statistics, U.S. Department of Labor.
  • Release Time: 8:30 ET, about the 13th of each month for the prior month.
  • Raw Data Available At: http://stats.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.toc.htm.

The Consumer Price Index is a measure of the price level of a fixed market basket of goods and services purchased by consumers. CPI is the most widely cited inflation indicator, and it is used to calculate cost of living adjustments for government programs and it is the basis of COLAs for many private labor agreements as well. It has been criticized for overstating inflation, because it does not adjust for substitution effects and because the fixed basket does not reflect price changes in new technology goods which are often declining in price. Despite these criticisms, it remains the benchmark inflation index.

CPI can be greatly influenced in any given month by a movement in volatile food and energy prices. Therefore, it is important to look at CPI excluding food and energy, commonly called the "core rate" of inflation. Within the core rate, some of the more volatile and closely watched components are apparel, tobacco, airfares, and new cars. In addition to tracking the month/month changes in core CPI, the year/year change in core CPI is seen by most economists as the best measure of the underlying inflation rate.


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