Outside feels more expensive because it literally is https://t.co/UIdu07jWGh
— Alexia (@Alexiabaillow) June 11, 2021
Beyond the exorbitant gas increase, bacon and whiskey are the most concerning. https://t.co/NijWpjUF4i
— Soturi (@FedSnap) June 11, 2021
While a 5% increase in the Consumer Price Index grabbed headlines on Thursday, underneath the hood of the CPI numbers, it's clear that not all items moved in tandem.
— Axios (@axios) June 11, 2021
Go deeper: https://t.co/Rt59YgDTuK pic.twitter.com/bgsBUL8ciK
Everyone gets the inflation chart they deserve https://t.co/S9NgSkEIqf
— HansNichols (@HansNichols) June 11, 2021
WSJ記事
— ほりぐちだいすけ (@dddddaaaaaisuke) June 10, 2021
アメリカインフレ価格上昇したのは
外食ホテル等昨年の反動
車関係の半導体等原材料供給不足
住宅関連などその他生活様式の変化
昨年反動や半導体はFRBのいう通り一時的かもしれないけど、三番目は果たして生活様式の変化だけかな…当然バラマキの影響強いのでは?https://t.co/0gcazqJkMI https://t.co/O0N2xuVEIW
9.2M extremely low-income renters are spending more than a third of their income on shelter-related expenses & as the cost of shelter increases, it can have a “cascading effect on extremely low-income renters. - @AGAurand h/t @jepassy https://t.co/dpHa1PMQny
— National Low Income Housing Coalition (@NLIHC) June 11, 2021
Mainstream articles are starting to point out the quirks in CPI calculation that many on fintwit have been discussing for years.
— The Rational Walk (@rationalwalk) June 11, 2021
The more inflation headlines, the higher expectations get, and the cycle self-reinforces.https://t.co/Jufgo4z8x0