Inflation is typically measured as the percentage change in prices over 12 months. The reason for doing so is that monthly inflation rates are highly erratic, making it difficult to interpret them.
But using annual inflation introduces a long delay between monthly inflation and the year-on-year change in prices that may lead central banks to misinterpret inflation pressures. Consider the annual US inflation rate, which was 6.5% in December 2022. In the same month, prices fell by 0.1%. Indeed, the high annual inflation rate largely reflects the very high monthly inflation rates recorded in March and June 2022, that is, nine or six months earlier.
When inflation rates are broadly stable, the annual averaging provides a good indication of current inflation pressures. But when inflation rates are changing quickly, as they have in the last two years, then the averaging procedure produces a backward-looking and distorted picture of price pressures. Annual inflation will look too low when rising price pressures intensify and too high as they abate.
A recent paper proposes a new way of computing inflation that is more informative about price pressures but not as volatile as monthly inflation rates.1 While annual inflation can be thought of as a putting an equal weight on the last 12 monthly inflation rates, the new measure puts more weight on recent observations and less on observations in the distant past.2
To illustrate the method, the figure below shows the weight for different measures of inflation. The brown pillar shows that monthly inflation puts a weight of unity on the current monthly inflation rate. Since monthly inflation rates are affected by measurement errors and other irregularities, it is very volatile.
The annual inflation rate puts an equal weight on the current and on the past eleven monthly inflation rates as shown by the dark blue pillars.3 This procedure smooths the effects of any measurement errors and temporary disturbances, at the cost of introducing a six-month delay between the monthly and annual inflation rates.4
In comparison with the annual inflation rate, the new measures put greater weight on the current and recent monthly inflation rates, but less weight on monthly inflation rates further back in time. This makes it more sensitive to current inflation pressures, at the cost of being a little more volatile.
The weights can be constructed in many different ways. The figure below shows two such sets of weights. The first, shown in orange, is selected so that half of the adjustment of annual inflation to monthly inflation is achieved in three months, and the second in light blue assumes that half of the adjustment is achieved in two months.5