Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines

Core inflation removes from headline inflation (i.e., overall CPI inflation) volatile prices. One way for removal is “exclusion” of selected commodities by setting their weights to zero, which is practiced in the Philippines—and in Brazil, Israel, Korea, Poland, and the United States, to name a few—...

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Main Author: Dumagan, Jesus C.
Format: text
Published: Animo Repository 2022
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/res_aki/6
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/res_aki/article/1004/viewcontent/dlsu_aki_working_paper_series_2022_04_082_finalversion.pdf
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:res_aki-10042023-05-23T06:24:29Z Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines Dumagan, Jesus C. Core inflation removes from headline inflation (i.e., overall CPI inflation) volatile prices. One way for removal is “exclusion” of selected commodities by setting their weights to zero, which is practiced in the Philippines—and in Brazil, Israel, Korea, Poland, and the United States, to name a few—where “food” and “energy” items are excluded. Using Philippine Statistics Authority CPI data (January 2012–July 2021) and procedures, this paper shows that core inflation by exclusion is misleading because it could be higher than headline inflation when the excluded items have positive inflation contributions. To avoid this misleading result, this paper proposes “neutralization” of the excluded commodities by keeping them in the CPI basket but making their CPIs constant, thus, neutralizing them because, in this case, they cannot contribute to inflation. Neutralization yields the logical result that core inflation is lower (higher) than headline inflation if the neutralized commodities have positive (negative) total inflation contributions. Moreover, neutralizing commodities with inflation contributions that are not statistically significantly different from zero yields core inflation with statistically the same mean but lower variance than headline inflation. A sufficient but not necessary condition to lower variance is derived that in practice is very rarely violated. Thus, neutralization permits more precise inflation forecasts for the purposes of monetary policy consistent with the overall or headline price trend of the economy. 2022-04-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/res_aki/6 https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/res_aki/article/1004/viewcontent/dlsu_aki_working_paper_series_2022_04_082_finalversion.pdf Angelo King Institute for Economic and Business Studies Animo Repository Headline inflation core inflation exclusion neutralization
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Headline inflation
core inflation
exclusion
neutralization
spellingShingle Headline inflation
core inflation
exclusion
neutralization
Dumagan, Jesus C.
Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
description Core inflation removes from headline inflation (i.e., overall CPI inflation) volatile prices. One way for removal is “exclusion” of selected commodities by setting their weights to zero, which is practiced in the Philippines—and in Brazil, Israel, Korea, Poland, and the United States, to name a few—where “food” and “energy” items are excluded. Using Philippine Statistics Authority CPI data (January 2012–July 2021) and procedures, this paper shows that core inflation by exclusion is misleading because it could be higher than headline inflation when the excluded items have positive inflation contributions. To avoid this misleading result, this paper proposes “neutralization” of the excluded commodities by keeping them in the CPI basket but making their CPIs constant, thus, neutralizing them because, in this case, they cannot contribute to inflation. Neutralization yields the logical result that core inflation is lower (higher) than headline inflation if the neutralized commodities have positive (negative) total inflation contributions. Moreover, neutralizing commodities with inflation contributions that are not statistically significantly different from zero yields core inflation with statistically the same mean but lower variance than headline inflation. A sufficient but not necessary condition to lower variance is derived that in practice is very rarely violated. Thus, neutralization permits more precise inflation forecasts for the purposes of monetary policy consistent with the overall or headline price trend of the economy.
format text
author Dumagan, Jesus C.
author_facet Dumagan, Jesus C.
author_sort Dumagan, Jesus C.
title Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
title_short Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
title_full Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
title_fullStr Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
title_full_unstemmed Comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: Results for the Philippines
title_sort comparing "exclusion" and "neutralization" for computing core inflation: results for the philippines
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2022
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/res_aki/6
https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/context/res_aki/article/1004/viewcontent/dlsu_aki_working_paper_series_2022_04_082_finalversion.pdf
_version_ 1767197080286134272