> Usually if official statistics and what you see are misaligned, its the official statistics that are wrong.
"What you see" is literally what's being measured, though. Typical prices for typical commodities grew less than expected. The outlier is one particular commodity (petroleum) which is experiencing an external shock.
Sanctions on Russia are poorly explained as "inflation", obviously.
> Personally I have seen prices go up well above 10%.
On what? Does that not match up with the data in the report? If so, document it! You'll be internet famous, if nothing else.
"What you see" is literally what's being measured, though. Typical prices for typical commodities grew less than expected. The outlier is one particular commodity (petroleum) which is experiencing an external shock.
Sanctions on Russia are poorly explained as "inflation", obviously.
> Personally I have seen prices go up well above 10%.
On what? Does that not match up with the data in the report? If so, document it! You'll be internet famous, if nothing else.