During the last year the topic of inflation rates around the globe gained traction. Opening up the newspaper one is often confronted with quotes reporting sky-high inflation rates:
USA:
The annual inflation rate in the US accelerated to 9.1% in June of 2022, the highest since November of 1981, from 8.6% in May and above market forecasts of 8.8%.
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/inflation-cpi
EU:
Euro area annual inflation is expected to be 8.9 % in July 2022, up from 8.6 % in June 2022.
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained
Switzerland:
Annual inflation rate in Switzerland increased to 3.4% in June of 2022 from 2.9% in May, and beating market forecasts of a 3.2 percent rise. It was the highest inflation rate since October 1993
https://tradingeconomics.com/switzerland/inflation-cpi
Naturally, the question arises of how the different reported increases between the regions and countries compare to each other. Since I reside in Switzerland I want to deal first with how the inflation is actually measured here.
Inflation index in Switzerland
The most famous measure to gauche inflation in Switzerland is the so-called LIK which stands for “Landesindex der Konsumentenpreise”. In my view it is comparable to the term consumer price index (CPI) used in the USA. It basically measures the development of prices for household’s relevant goods. General information can be found here.
Weight evolvement
To understand which categories contributes which part to the LIK, I downloaded the LIK weights from the bfs here. In the upper plot you can see the different weights per year e.g. for the year 2022 “Living and Energy” was the most biggest weight with 26.595%. You can select between the years 2000 and 2022. In the lower plot you can see how the weight for the selected category evolved over the time period between 2000 and 2022 e.g. we can see that the “Living and Energy” had a minimal weight of 24.747% in 2016 and then started to rise again.