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Provides a standard way of indicating the "current" year of the inflated prices calculated by the Inflation template. This template is relied upon by the Inflation template, but can also be called directly in articles needing to specify the currently most recent year for which inflation is calculated for a given index. See the Inflation template for usage examples. Template parameters [Edit ...
This template is used on approximately 6,800 pages and changes may be widely noticed. Test changes in the template's /sandbox or /testcases subpages, or in your own user subpage . Consider discussing changes on the talk page before implementing them.
This template defaults to calculating the inflation of Consumer Price Index values: staples, workers' rent, small service bills (doctor's costs, train tickets). For inflating capital expenses, government expenses, or the personal wealth and expenditure of the rich, the US-GDP or UK-GDP indexes should be used, which calculate inflation based on the gross domestic product (GDP) for the United ...
People crowd the front of a Gray's Papaya hot dog and fruit juice restaurant in New York on Nov. 23, 2023. Confidence is growing among Federal Reserve officials and many economists that high ...
This only works for years that the inflation template has figures for. This usually doesn't go up to the current year (for example, if you add the template in 2023, it might give figures for 2020 or something). This is not a bug; see Template:Inflation/year. It takes some amount of time for inflation figures to be calculated and made public.
Consumer prices rose at the slowest pace since April 2021 as inflation showed further signs of cooling in May, according to the latest data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics released Tuesday ...
According to Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, inflation continues to moderate and return to the Federal Reserve’s inflation target early in Biden’s potential second term.
An analysis conducted by Politico in May 2023 found that in the United States, wage growth for the bottom 10th percentile of the wage scale beat inflation by a strong 5.7% from 2020 through 2022. For the middle 50th percentile, real wages were down by 1%, while they were down 5% for the top 90th percentile.