He's also not even looking at Russian statistics, which is what we actually should be looking at.
Plus the food prices probably aren't hitting everywhere in Russia equally.
I mentioned the russian inflation first; mainiac responded with 'food inflation isn't linked to actual inflation'. I am not talking about overall Russian inflation or the implications of CPI on them specifically. But in fact, the discussion can be extrapolated to any nation. The USA is just an easier example for me, since I know our food prices have doubled and I know our 'CPI' isn't reporting it. Russia could very well be repackaging things with 50% the product to hide food inflation, but I don't know.
I do know that 16% inflation in food prices in one month is a very bad number to achieve, especially if it isn't average through the nation. If it isn't being felt in moscow than the other areas which are getting this inflation must be hurting very badly.
We talking about a 3% gap over the course of 13 years. In that context talking about changes in a single item in a single month is a perfect example of missing the forest for the trees. Yes that data is extremely useful given enough time. But we dont want to wait a decade for information.
I am about 99.9% sure the divergence is more than 3%. I've lived long enough to see food packaging become half of what it was ten years ago for the exact same cost. For a 15-20% amount of your budget [I am sure that number is more now with the entrenched food price increases around the world], this is a huge change in ten or fifteen years. You've either stopped buying half the food you used to, or you spend twice as much as you did before.
If we want to talk consumer purchasing power there are much better sources of information on that. Want to know energy? Whats the output looking like?
I agree. Looks like consumers have had to spend double on energy in the last ten years as well, another number totally ignored and misrepresented by the current CPI.