Related BLS programs | Related articles
Comparing U.S. and European inflation: the CPI and the HICP
Walter Lane
Chief, Branch of Consumer Prices, Office of Prices and Living Conditions, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Mary Lynn Schmidt
Economist, Branch of Consumer Prices, Office of Prices and Living Conditions, Bureau of Labor Statistics.
E-mail:
Lane.Walter@bls.gov
This article introduces an experimental consumer price index for the United States that follows, to the extent possible, the methods of the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP), the European Union’s (EU’s) official price index. The U.S. HICP differs from the U.S. Consumer Price Index (CPI) in two major respects: the HICP includes the rural population in its scope and it excludes owner-occupied housing. To construct the experimental U.S. HICP, the CPI first was expanded to cover the entire (noninstitutional) U.S. population and then was narrowed to remove the owner-occupied housing costs that the HICP excludes from its scope.
Read excerpt Download full article in PDF (74K)
Related Monthly Labor Review articles
Inflation and the
business cycle during the postwar period.—Nov.
1984.
Defining the rate of underlying inflation (PDF).—Sept.
1981.
Within Monthly Labor Review Online:
Welcome | Current Issue | Index | Subscribe | Archives
Exit Monthly Labor Review Online:
BLS Home | Publications & Research Papers