Your Real Cost of Living
Forget the national averages: Your personal inflation rate is likely to be higher.
By Anne Kates Smith, Senior Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, January 2008
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Few people strive to be just average. But when it comes to inflation, some folks would jump at the chance. In late 2007, consumer prices were up an average of 2.8% nationwide over the preceding 12 months. That's not much. So why is it so painful every time you go to the grocery store? Probably it's because your personal consumer price index diverges from the national average.
For starters, you're not national. Like real estate, most shopping is local and prices vary by region. For instance, the cost of living in Houston and Galveston is flat compared with a year ago. But across the Gulf of Mexico in the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area, prices are up almost 4%.
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SLIDE SHOW: Most and Least Expensive Metro Areas | ||
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CALCULATOR: What's Your Cost of Living Index? | ||
Nor can you possibly be average, statistically. That's because the official consumer price index reflects an array of households simultaneously. Both renters and homeowners figure in the overall cost of housing, both drinkers and teetotalers in the cost of food and beverages, both the sick and the healthy in the cost of medical care.
Furthermore, the feds use extensive surveys to weight the importance of items in their CPI basket of consumer goods. Spend more than average on items whose prices are rising faster than average, and your personal inflation rate could soar.
For example, we'll make an educated guess that your personal inflation rate is well above average if you have a son or daughter in college. For one thing, the CPI assumes that only about 3% of spending goes to education. For another, college-cost inflation has been running around 5% to 8% a year, more than double the average inflation rate in recent years. The double whammy of devoting a bigger-than-average share of your spending to an expense that is rising at an above-average pace could push your personal inflation rate into double digits.
Critics say bureaucrats understate the CPI by assuming shoppers will sub cheaper items for pricier ones, and by adjusting price hikes downward to reflect quality improvements in what we buy.
Food for thought. When you get right down to it, not even the average is average. Food and beverage prices are rising at a 4.4% annual rate. But dairy prices are up 13% (and 26% for a gallon of whole milk alone), thanks to price supports and brisk exports of powdered milk.
Meanwhile, meat prices are up 6%, and bakery products are up 4.6% because corn is being converted into ethanol instead of animal feed, muffins and sweetener. "We haven't seen an increase of this magnitude in grocery prices since 1990," says Bureau of Labor Statistics economist Patrick Jackman.
The news isn't all bad. Apparel prices are falling. Ladies, your clothes are about 3% cheaper than they were a year ago. Technology prices are down nearly 15%; computers are down 10%. Couch potatoes, rejoice: TV markdowns are running 25%.
Ways to save. Still, if you're buying groceries and gas more often than flat-screen TVs, you'll feel the pinch. Fortunately, you can fight some trends. Buying gas with a credit card that rebates part of the cost will lessen the sting of a 9% hike in prices since late 2006; Kiplinger's likes the BP Rewards Visa (see "The 2007 Best List").
With the cost of health insurance up nearly 12%, shedding pounds or chucking cigarettes may yield financial rewards. Your boss -- like 48% of those surveyed by Hewitt Associates -- may cut you a break on premiums if you take a health-risk appraisal or pledge to live healthier.
Got kids in college? This semester, don't buy textbooks. Rent them instead from discounters such as BookRenter.com or Chegg.com. Textbook prices are up 9% from a year ago, so shaving your tab there might get you a little closer to "average."




Reader Comments (10)
Posted by: james leonard at 12/15/2007 05:57:13 PM
(T)he goverment plays games with the cpi index...they took out the 2 biggest inflation items, fuel and food, replaced them, with 2 very low inflation products. That is why you have a very low number,
Posted by: Frank Fama at 12/19/2007 11:10:14 AM
In my opinion, our Government is selling out the middle and lower-class American people and using bull reasons to do it. Keep moving jobs out of the USA and fund other countries to get the jobs...And you Americans, yes you--keep buying goods made in other countries and let food exports go at low prices...In addition, why do we have to pay for being the police force of other country---costing us money and our children...
Posted by: Vaibhav Mehta at 12/19/2007 12:12:33 PM
Personal Inflation will be far less than National Average since your mortgage payments, life insurance payments are going to remain fixed throughout their life. Mortgage payment constitutes around 40-50% of average American monthly expense. So only 60%-40% of your monthly expense will be subject to inflation.
Posted by: Ted Li at 12/19/2007 01:44:34 PM
I agree with the article and comments from James Leonard. Yes the government is always selling out the middle class because it is the biggest chuck of tax dollars. The rich is paying their fair share but the poor does not have money to pay. So you end up with the middle class which are trying to make ends meet....(I)f American goods can be made less expensive, I would buy American made goods. But I am in the middle class and cannot afford the American Made goods. If we can compete with the lower labor cost with other countries like China and India, I believe the goods made in USA will be lower. But can we compete in getting a lower wage to survive?
Posted by: Suzanne at 12/20/2007 06:50:45 AM
The government is NUTS not to include food (groceries) and energy when figuring the inflation rate. That is simply crazy! Inflation is much higher than the government says.
Posted by: geo at 12/20/2007 01:19:55 PM
Hello ... you left out a large east coast area (New England) in your cost of living article. Sure it is in the Northeast but wasn't covered anywhere.
Posted by: tom wagner at 01/02/2008 03:32:15 PM
...I don't see any relief for the middle class, but the figures on inflation are skewed to provide relief for the goverment and corporate, not the individual....
Posted by: Jake Becker at 10/14/2008 02:43:58 PM
Suzanne is right--how can the government possibly justify not including the two most massive spending sectors in anyone's budget? Ridiculous and wrong. Guess my cost-of-living increase will be for what the government decides I spend, not what I really have to spend.
Posted by: ad at 10/15/2008 01:39:16 AM
(A commenter here) states that the government doesn't include groceries...(but) the third paragraph states that it does include groceries, although said in a somewhat poetic manner.
Posted by: Douglas Richard Brow at 06/01/2009 01:19:39 PM
Where is the info that tells me how my metro area ranks? This is what I came to this web page for. Where is it? Editor's Note: We couldn't list every metro area, but please try our calculator of your own personal cost of living at http://www.kiplinger.com/tools/personalcpi/index.php Hope this helps.