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Deconstructing and Debunking Shadowstats

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Publié le 29 avril 2015
804 mots - Temps de lecture : 2 - 3 minutes
( 2 votes, 1,5/5 ) , 2 commentaires
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Rubrique : Editoriaux

An interesting article came my way today courtesy of a friend "BC". The article is Deconstructing ShadowStats. Why is it so Loved by its Followers but Scorned by Economists? by Ed Dolan.

Mish readers likely know that I believe inflation to be understated, and that I also believe Williams' ShadowStats is wildly on the high side. For example, please consider GDP, Real GDP, and Shadowstats "Theater of the Absurd" GDP.

I have also mentioned food inflation on many occasions. While food prices (especially beef) did jump in the last year or so, I recently bought chicken breasts for $.99 a pound and very lean center cut pork chops for $2.49. Sale prices on center cut pork chops have generally ranged from $1.79 to $2.49 for 15 years! Not on sale, I have seen them as high as $5.49.

So I buy pork chops on sale, and freeze them. Same with chicken and beef. While non-sale prices have gone up more, ShadowStats calculations seem absurd.

Want to combat food inflation? Buy a big freezer, buy food on sale, and freeze it.

I never dove in into Williams' numbers to see where he may have gone wrong. Ed Dolan just did that, with convincing tables, graphs, and commentary.

Here is a snip.

A can of tomato sauce that cost $.25 at Piggly Wiggly in 1982 cost $.79 at my local market in early 2015. Starting from the 1982 price, the CPI predicts that it should cost $.61 in 2015 while ShadowStats predicts that it should cost $2.64. Starting from the 2015 price and working backwards, the CPI predicts that it should have cost $.32 in 1982 while ShadowStats predicts that is should have cost $.08. Based on these calculations, we see that the CPI underestimates inflation, as measured by the Tomato Sauce Index: The ratio of the 2015 predicted price of $.61 to the 2015 actual price, $.79, is .77, an underestimate of 23 percent. The ratio of the ShadowStats prediction to the actual price is 3.32, an overstatement of 223 percent. For tuna, both indexes overestimate inflation, the CPI by 34 percent and ShadowStats by 478 percent, and so on.



Has Williams Simply Made a Mistake?

The fact that the ShadowStats inflation rate fails every crosscheck makes one wonder whether Williams has simply made some kind of mistake in his calculations. I believe that he has done just that. The mistake, I think, can be found in a table given in a post that represents Williams’ most complete explanation of his methodology.

... Williams’ use of a running total of inflation differentials to compute a “cumulative inflation shortfall” of 5.1 percentage points exaggerates the true impact of the methodological changes made by the BLS. A better way to estimate the cumulative inflation shortfall would be to look at the differences between CPI-U-RS and CPI-U before 1983, the year when the BLS implemented the first of the changes that it incorporates in the CPI-U-RS series. That approach is not quite as precise when we use real-world numbers, as Williams does in his original table. As explained earlier, the actual data include statistical noise caused by changes in weighting and in relative price changes among sectors. However, we can approximate the true inflation shortfall by averaging the numbers for 1981 and 1982 from Williams’ table, giving an estimate of -0.45 percentage points.

As mentioned above, Williams’ ShadowStats inflation series incorporates an additional 2.0 percentage point correction to reflect methodological changes that are not captured in the CPI-U-RS series. I would like to examine that number more carefully in a future post, but for the sake of discussion, we can let it stand. If so, it appears to me that, based entirely on Williams’ own data, methods, and assumptions, the adjustment for the ShadowStats inflation series should be about 2.45 percentage points below CPI-U, rather than the 7 percentage points he uses.

In my view, Williams alternative measure of inflation would be more convincing if he were to make this correction. It would also be less likely to feed the anti-government paranoia of some of his followers, who allege that the BLS is falsifies source data and manipulates reported indicators in the way that Argentina and some other countries appear to do.

If you are a true believer in ShadowStats numbers, I suggest you read Dolan's article in entirety for a convincing rebuttal.

By the way, Dolan was quite polite in his rebuttal, concluding with "I would like to thank Williams for taking the time to make detailed comments on an earlier draft of this post. Our private dialog has not yet led to a complete resolution of the issues I have raised here, but I hope that he will address them in future public comments. The search for alternative inflation indicators goes on."

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

 

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Mish ,I am flabbergasted at the pure UTTER TRIPE that is contained in your article.Mish are you BRAIN DEAD my boy??? Do you really know what you are talking about??
First of all you are writing out of the united states of america,this is the LAND OF THE LIE where what you read has to be taken and disected sanitised for lies etc.
You come across as an extremely naieve sort of a bloke.
Take one of your purchases for example the chicken (are you sure its chicken??)nyway this wretched piece of meat was MASSED PRODUCED and was injected at lleast 40 times and fed Genetically Modified Food produced from grain grown from monsatanto seeds.That said it is so massed produced that whatever you didn't buy went into a foul KFC product .The production cost was somewhere in the vicinity of 38cents a pound all in.Then there is the pork the same for that...I would hate to what else is in that foul kitchen cupboard of yours...probably lavatory cleaner better known as coca cola to the rest of the world bought at cents on the dollarWhat we can clearly demonstrate to you and that is groceries worldwide are down and because you mmay find some of them in the inflation basket ....this is because what the cherry pickers of the stats do.
The concomitant result of buying cheap and NASTY is going to be ahuge crank up in your future medical bills.the average americans life span is shrinking.A baby born today will
not see more than 48 years and so go on believeing the lies you extrapolate fromyour cronies and stats department I will weigh in with Mr John Williams of Shadow STATS as for you MISH you have grossly DISCREDITED yourself with me
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I was under the impression that the inflation stats on his site were, as he explained them: one set is "official government inflation", and the other is "inflation, assuming the government is correct about why it made a change."

See, the government changes how it measures inflation, on a fairly regular basis. When it makes a change, it justifies it, eg, "we're making this change because the current rules overstate inflation by 1%."

So, pre change inflation is 6%, and post-change inflation is 5%, for example.

Thing is, every single time government changes the word "inflation", the new "official" inflation numbers go down. Every time, which is statistically unreasonable. That said, I'm sure, at least coincidentally, the government IS correctly justified in making a change.

Anyway, what you see on the front page of Shadowstats is simply "what inflation would be, had government made all the changes, and assuming the government is telling the truth". That's all, no more, nor less. It's what he says, and do note the two lines are simply copies, one translated higher--the total of all the differences in the rules changes.

Now, I'm more than willing to concede that this chart overstates "real" inflation, whatever that is, but realize even in your example of the prices of certain cuts of meat not changing, you're missing some details: factory farming has grossly reduced the cost of meat by dramatically raising the efficiency of such production. Alas, all those improvements give no benefit to the consumer, it's all slurped away by inflation.

By comparison, note how the cost of high quality steel dropped well over 95% in price in the 19th century as manufacturing techniques improved. We don't see that anymore, since inflation slurps up every improvement. Inflation is not a simple concept at all, and it should be obvious that the chart on the first page of Shadowstats is a very simple representation of but one aspect of one measure of inflation.
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Mish ,I am flabbergasted at the pure UTTER TRIPE that is contained in your article.Mish are you BRAIN DEAD my boy??? Do you really know what you are talking about?? First of all you are writing out of the united states of america,this is the LAND OF THE  Lire la suite
neville - 29/04/2015 à 08:00 GMT
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