PlayasBum t1_jefobh9 wrote
Reply to comment by xdzgor in Eurozone inflation falls sharply as energy prices drop by misana123
If you go 0 to 60 in 3 seconds and then 60 to 70 in 3 seconds, your acceleration has decreased in the last 3 seconds, even though you went faster. It’s the same thing.
ArgumentWide7165 t1_jefv1yz wrote
Perfect explanation.
It’s not a deflationary period, just less inflation. We probably won’t see a deflationary period so now is the time to ask for a raise.
xdzgor t1_jeg1pny wrote
Don't quite get the analogy.
For example
Feb 2022 price = $1000
Mar 2022 price = $5000
Feb 2023 price = $1150
Mar 2023 price = $5770
This shows a 15% increase Feb 2022 - Feb 2023
and 15.4% increase Mar 2022 - Mar 2023.
​
Do the numbers show a fall in inflation?
PlayasBum t1_jeg8653 wrote
Your numbers are inherently flawed. Not sure if it’s because of you’re lack of understanding or intentional. You cant have 1xxx in February and have 5xxxx in March.
xdzgor t1_jeg99a4 wrote
They're just examples - there were no actual numbers in the article, only dates and percentage increases
PlayasBum t1_jegbcku wrote
In your example you have 500% inflation from F22 - M22. Then 4xx% deflation M22 to F23. Then almost 500% inflation again. Although they technically fit the headline, the narrative won’t be the same, as you likely have currency instability. More accurate numbers would be
Feb 2022 = $100 Mar 2022 = $100 Feb 2023 = $115 Mar 2023 = $115.4
What they’re not showing, is January numbers, which hypothetically could look like
Jan 2022 = $100 Jan 2023 = $110
Adding that, you can see the rate of change YoY being 10%, 15%, 15.4%.
Not sure if that helps you visualize it better.
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