Thursday 19 February 2009

What IS happening to prices?

During the Great Depression prices in the US fell by 10% a year from 1930 - 33. Fears of deflation are obviously weighing heavily in the minds of the Bank of England's MPC (see 'Turn on the printing press' below) But what exactly IS happening to prices in the UK.

On the government's preferred measure of prices (the Consumer Price Index - CPI), prices were UP 3.0% last month compared to January 2007. So what is all the fuss about deflation? Part of the problem is that whilst the CPI shows prices rising the comparisonn is with the same period last year. So prices may be falling but they may still be higher than last January. The expectation is that by the middle of the year CPI will be showing more of the trend that worries the Bank of England.

An alternative measure of prices, the RPI (Retail Price Index), shows prices last month only 0.1% higher than last January. But the RPI includes a measure of mortage interest payments which are falling due to lower interest rates and falling house prices. The correction in house prices is probably in itself desirable. Asset price bubbles as they are known (over-inflated house prices for eaxmple) tend to devote scarce resources away from their most productive uses - a little less obsession with property prices would not be a bad thing. The house price bubble of the last decade is, after all, why we are where we are today and what led to 'creative' banking practices at the root of the credit crunch.

Prices, then, may not be falling and inflation may still be above the Bank of England's target rate of 2%. But, as we have seen, economic indicators can turn on the head of a pin.

Watch this space ...

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