Concepts

Base Effect

CAPF wiki1 min read6 sections
At a glance
SubjectEconomy

Definition

The way a current rate of change (such as inflation or growth) is distorted by the level in the earlier period used as the comparison base, so that an unusually high or low base makes the new figure look smaller or larger than the underlying trend.

Key points

  • Inflation and growth are usually reported year-on-year, comparing the latest month or quarter with the same period a year earlier (the base period).
  • If the base period had unusually high prices, the current year-on-year inflation can look low even when prices are still rising; if the base was unusually low, inflation looks high.
  • It is a statistical artefact, not a real change in current conditions, so analysts watch the month-on-month trend as well.
  • The base effect commonly explains sudden dips or spikes in headline inflation that reverse once the unusual base passes; see concept inflation and concept core inflation.
  • It applies to any year-on-year series, including GDP growth, industrial production, and exports.

Why it matters for CAPF

The concept (a high or low comparison base distorting the reported year-on-year rate) is a recurring point in inflation and growth commentary; verify the latest data context.

Common confusion

The base effect is a statistical comparison issue, not a real change in prices or output; a "low" headline inflation reading may simply reflect a high base a year earlier.

One-line recall

An unusually high or low comparison base distorts the year-on-year rate of inflation or growth; a statistical artefact, not a real change.

Parent note

inflation and prices

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