Jonas Ljungberg needed access to different European countries' consumer price indices (CPIs) for the last 150 years to calculate real exchange rates for a research project. But when he looked at the CPIs listed in popular databases, he found that several of the figures were not reliable. This discovery led Jonas Ljungberg to launch a new research project in which he went back to the sources and compiled the most credible consumer price indices from 24 European countries between 1870 and 2022.
鈥淚 was not overconfident about the accuracy of some of the CPIs from the start, but what I found went beyond my expectations. My research shows that there is a lot of insufficient work behind several of the European consumer price indices that are often used and cited,鈥 says Jonas Ljungberg, Professor Emeritus of Economic History at 51重口猎奇 School of Economics and Management (LUSEM) in Sweden.
鈥淥bvious accounting errors鈥
Jonas Ljungberg has studied exchange rates, prices and technological change for many years and specialises in measurement problems in economic history. When he went back to the sources that the databases referred to, he found that in the case of Germany, it was a matter of obvious accounting errors.
More specifically, a common source for those who want to find out about historical CPIs is the Clio Infra database, which in turn refers to the compilations of Professor Carmen Reinhart, former chief economist of the World Bank.
鈥淭he inflation rate in Germany Reinhart鈥檚 datasets seems to be twice as high from the 19th century until 1979. This must affect models and series 鈥 and in turn analyses and policy decisions,鈥 says Jonas Ljungberg.
One possible explanation for the errors, according to Ljungberg, could be that the person who originally handled the data has accidentally duplicated it.
鈥淚 did a test and divided Reinhart's figures by two and compared them with the data from her source. It turned out that if you multiply the original source鈥檚 figures by two, then you got Reinhart's,鈥 he says.
Jonas Ljungberg is now calling for further research.
鈥淚naccurate historical CPIs can have consequences for different decisions and strategies on, for example, inflation control. We cannot afford them to be wrong,鈥 he says.
Outdated methods behind French CPI
Other examples of oddities in the statistics do not necessarily have to be accounting errors, but for some countries, a now outdated method was used for the calculation of the CPI. As an example, Jonas Ljungberg mentions the French researcher Jeanne Singer-K茅rel who, in her doctoral thesis from 1960, presents two different indices, the 鈥213 articles鈥 and the 鈥214 articles鈥 for the cost of living in France, and it is the latter that has been most widely publicised.
鈥淚t may sound as if 214 items are better than 213, but if you look at what is included, you see that the 214th article was 鈥済age鈥 or wages of servants and this index was intended to measure the cost of living for a well-off family,鈥 says Jonas Ljungberg.
However, he points out that even the 213 index (which focuses more on a working-class family) has some shortcomings, not least because it uses a fixed weighting for over a century.
鈥淲hat is remarkable in the case of Singer-K茅rel鈥檚 indices, however, is that in the same thesis, there is a modern index, where the weights change over different historical periods. I recommend that this is the index that should be used,鈥 says Jonas Ljungberg.
Before the final publication of the article, Jonas Ljungberg made a working paper available for other researchers to review and provide feedback. This allowed him to follow up on several interesting leads, for example on consumer price indices for Serbia and Germany.