The BEA’s Personal Income and Outlays report for October shows real (inflation-adjusted) disposable personal income rose 0.4 percent but real spending rose 0.1 percent.To arrive at real numbers, subtract the PCE price index spending and income. Rounding accounts for apparent difference (e.g the PCE price index was rounded down to 0.2 but current dollar spending was rounded up to 0.4)
Personal Income
Personal Consumption Expenditures
PCE Price Index
PCE vs CPIThe PCE price index is the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation.PCE includes prices paid on behalf of consumers such as Medicare and corporate health insurance.The CPI only counts items directly paid by consumers.As a result of those methodology differences, the CPI overweighs rent while the PCE overweighs health care.Both indexes are flawed because neither includes home prices, only rent. In general, inflation matters, not just consumer inflation.
Fed Not Exactly Pleased With ReportThe Fed is more concerned about inflation in services than goods. Prices for services increased 0.4 percent.Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index increased 0.3 percent, and that’s not a good number either.Moreover, Trump is threatening huge increases in tariffs which is inflationary.November 25: Trump Threatens 25 Percent Tariffs on Mexico and Canada on Day One
Trump says he will unilaterally scrap his own allegedly “Best in History” trade deal with huge tariff hikes on our top two trading partners. Is this constitutional?
November 27: What Industries Will Suffer the Most Under Trump’s Plan to “Make Tariff’s Great Again”?Trump is upping the rhetoric on Mexico, Canada, and China on top of previous tariff threats. Who will be hardest hit?More By This Author:What Industries Will Suffer The Most Under Trump’s Plan To “Make Tariff’s Great Again”?
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