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| Consumer Prices Fall … or Rise? | | Print | |
| Written by Warren Mass | ||||||
| Friday, 19 February 2010 16:30 | ||||||
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“Core consumer prices” exclude energy and food. On an annual basis that are not adjusted for seasonal factors, consumer prices rose by 2.6% in January. Core consumer prices rose by 1.6% from 12 months ago. The Labor Department's report showed that energy prices led the increases, rising by a monthly 2.8%, the largest gain since August 2009. The gasoline index rose by 4.4% in January. In December, energy prices rose by 0.8% month-on-month. Food prices were up 0.2% last month, with the index for dairy and related products rising 2.1%, following a 0.1% increase in December. An extension of the above-noted January increases throughout 2010 would result in annual increases of 33.6 percent for energy prices, with a 52.8 increase for gasoline; and a 2.4 percent increase in food prices, with dairy and related products increasing by 25.2 percent. On an unadjusted annual basis, consumer prices were up 2.6 percent from January 2009, a low base for comparison because consumer prices had fallen for five consecutive months in late 2008 as the global financial and economic crisis accelerated. Core CPI, excluding food and energy prices, unexpectedly fell 0.1 percent last month from December, the first decline since December 1982. [Emphasis added.] But there was no denying the bottom line. As the Financial Times reported: “Compared with a year ago, consumer prices are up 2.6 per cent.” Without the yo-yo effect of energy prices, the COLA for last January [2009] would have been barely half as large. The CPI-W for all items except energy rose only 3.1 percent during the period, based on monthly figures available on the BLS Web site. But there also would have been a COLA increase this coming January, too, and probably the year after as well. That’s because the CPI-W for all items except energy rose 1.5 percent in the last 12 months. Compare that to the 1.9 percent decline for all items including energy. Whatever the cause, Social Security recipients are going to feel squeezed this January, simply because they have become accustomed to annual increases. And about one in every four really will be squeezed, because their Medicare premiums will increase. Picture yourself as a retiree living mainly on Social Security. The price of your food, gasoline for your car, and heating bill have all gone up. But the government says that increase in food and energy don’t count in determining the cost of living, so you will get no COLA this year. Yet, with increased Medicare premiums, your net Social Security payment will actually go down. And a major factor in determining the drop in the “core” consumer price index — the cost of housing — has just decimated the value of your net worth by reducing the value of your home. Our government’s game playing in saying that our rising cost of living is nonexistent (or has actually gone down) is harmful to all Americans, but particularly to our retired senior citizens. And while it is true that Social Security and Medicare are not authorized by our Constitution, our citizenry has involutarily been made a participant in such schemes. To say that senior citizens should take what they get from Social Security without complaint because Social Security is not mandated by the Constitution ignores the fact that by forcing taxpayers to pay Social Security and Medicare taxes, our government has incurred an obligation to return fair value for what was confiscated. It would be better for all Americans, however, if our government would live within its means, spend money only for what the Constitution authorizes, and not lie about the effects its profligate spending practices have had on our cost of living. Photo: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (3)
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Bonnie
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To be sure, prises rose Prices on the stuff I need have been rising. Prices on the stuff I neither need nor can afford have been falling. I suspect that the reason these prices have fallen is that nobody else can afford them, either. Manufacturers/retailers are dropping prices to get rid of inventory... it costs them to maintain an inventory of stuff they can't sell. |
Bonnie
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Err, PRICES (not prises) WOW! A little too much caffeine and the fingers go all over the place! |
Harry
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Retired and fed up with Republicans and Democrats Taking into account that both parties embrace our fiat money system and that The U.S. has all the characteristics set in place that have led to the collapse of every other fiat currency money in history of the world, what choice do the people really have? |





“Core consumer prices” fell by a monthly 0.1 percent in January, reported the Wall Street Journal on February 19, noting that the last time core consumer prices fell was in December 1982. However, noted the Journal, citing the U.S. Department of Labor’s statement, the seasonally adjusted consumer price index rose 0.2 percent during the same month, the increase caused mainly by higher energy prices.

