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inflation

2 essays in the Forum tagged "inflation".

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Watching the Cracks

The May Print Lands: Testing the Hormuz Lag Predictions Against the Data

The Bureau of Labor Statistics released the May 2026 Consumer Price Index this morning. Headline inflation came in at 4.2% year-over-year — the third consecutive monthly acceleration and the highest reading since April 2023. Core inflation was only 2.9%. Gasoline rose 40.5% year-over-year against a 28.4% reading the prior month. Fuel oil rose 58.9%. Food inflation jumped from 2.3% to 3.1% in a single month. Article 26 of this catalog, published June 8, made specific time-bounded predictions about how the Hormuz supply shock would propagate to U.S. consumer prices on calendar-time mechanics. The May print is the first major data point that directly tests those predictions. This essay engages the data honestly against what the framework forecast — what is tracking, what is moving slower than predicted, what is moving faster, and what the divergence between the 4.2% headline and the 2.9% core tells us about where we are in the propagation timeline.

CPIHormuzinflationsupply shockpropagation lagFeketeMengerprediction testingFederal Reserveframework validation
Watching the Cracks

Aggregates That Lie: A Framework Audit of CPI, GDP, and the 2% Target

Headline CPI is running around 3% in mid-2026, the Federal Reserve continues to describe 2% as the price-stability target, and GDP is reported as a single quarterly figure that purports to summarize the productive output of the world's largest economy. The framework's reading is that all three aggregates are structurally incapable of measuring what they claim to measure — not because of bad faith or methodological sloppiness, but because the underlying conceptual approach is wrong for the questions the readings are being used to answer. This essay walks through the specific operations by which the aggregates fail, engages the existing critiques (Boskin Commission, ShadowStats, MIT Billion Prices Project) carefully, and proposes a five-component alternative measurement program drawing on the framework's accumulated tools.

CPIGDPinflationFederal ReserveBoskin CommissionMengerFeketemonetary theorymeasurementsaleability