devonwoody":2l7tum3i said:
RogerM,
Your calculations possibly could mean that inflation is 10%.
If inflation figure issued states 2. 5% and increases to 2. 75% that is a 10% increase!!!!!!!!!!!
So is inflation 10%?
Hmmm! Inflation on inflation. So by your argument John, if there was zero inflation for one period and in the next period it is 0.1%, that would be an infinite increase in percentage terms. Or if perhaps there was deflation of 1% (negative inflation) and then it went to +1% inflation, what would inflation be then by your definition?
The point I was really making is if we take 2 different households with different incomes but similar expenditure on essentials, your own personal measure of inflation would be different.
Say a professional person, taking home £3,000 per month, spends £120 per month on domestic fuel (gas, electricity, oil), that would represent 4% of his take home pay. If fuel rises by 25%, it will represent 5% of his take home pay - a 1% increase in his overall expenditure.
A pensioner on a pension of £120 per week who also spends £120 per month on fuel is spending 24% of their net income on fuel. Now if fuel rises by 25%, it will represent 30% of his net income - or a 6% increase in his overall expenditure.
Now, if you also factor in council tax which went up by over 10% for 5 consecutive years in Devon and apply the same logic (remembering that conveniently council tax is not included in the consumer prices index) the same principle would apply. The professional taking home £3,000 per month and paying £200 pm is paying 6.7% of his income in council tax. A 10% increase would increase this by just 0.67% of his net income.
On the other hand some pensioners are paying up to 40% of their net pension in council tax, so a 10% increase means that this would add a further 4% to their expenditure.
So, taking the 2 "big ticket" items of fuel and council tax in isolation, the professional is experiencing inflation of 1.67% and the pensioner inflation of 10%.
So, you can prove anything with statistics. To paraphrase Humpty Dumpty in Alice in Wonderland, Inflation is whatever the government says it is - they are the ones who set the rules that are used to measure it, Just don't expect it to have any bearing on your own reality!