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Sparta89 OP t1_j2t4vb7 wrote

Data source: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUUR0000SA0&output_view=pct_1mth

Tool: Microsoft Excel

I did the math to calculate the average monthly inflation in the USA at an annualized rate since 1950.

History shows that inflation is typically low in November and December. While it is highest in February, March, and June.

This provides a compelling reason why inflation has not yet peaked. The fall in inflation that the USA is seeing now may just be the typical seasonal pattern before inflation surges again over the next few months.

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itsniickgeo t1_j2tczqo wrote

I would figure it would be higher in November and December with all of the Christmas gifts being bought

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GameDoesntStop t1_j2tfwm9 wrote

Pretty interesting! I checked the data for Canada too, and found a similar pattern:

Month Average annualized inflation (1950 - 2022)
Jan 4.3%
Feb 5.1%
Mar 4.6%
Apr 4.2%
May 4.8%
Jun 4.4%
Jul 4.9%
Aug 3.2%
Sep 2.2%
Oct 3.6%
Nov 2.7%
Dec 0.4%
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Sparta89 OP t1_j2tw74u wrote

This data demonstrates than inflation is typically lower in the second half of the year, especially in November and December. So it would appear this year the inflation data is simply following the historical trend. Only if inflation doesn't rise in the January to March data can you say that inflation has peaked and isn't following the trend.

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redditseddit4u t1_j2ty88m wrote

Inflation is calculated based on the prices people pay for goods/services. I’d suspect inflation is lower in Nov/Dec because retail usually offers sales/discounts in those months (people buy more but it’s perhaps at a slightly lower price)

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darthy_parker t1_j2u3jxe wrote

I would guess it’s partly due to the many “sales” held from Thanksgiving to post-Christmas inventory clearance, and the end-of-year push at auto dealers to get car sales.

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