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Working Paper

Trimmed-Mean Inflation Statistics: Just Hit the One in the Middle

This paper reinvestigates the performance of trimmed-mean inflation measures some 20 years since their inception, asking whether there is a particular trimmed-mean measure that dominates the median CPI. Unlike previous research, we evaluate the performance of symmetric and asymmetric trimmed-means using a well-known equality of prediction test. We find that there is a large swath of trimmed-means that have statistically indistinguishable performance. Also, while the swath of statistically similar trims changes slightly over different sample periods, it always includes the median CPI--an extreme trim that holds conceptual and computational advantages. We conclude with a simple forecasting exercise that highlights the advantage of the median CPI (and trimmed-mean estimators in general) relative to other standard measures in forecasting headline inflation.

Suggested Citation

Meyer, Brent, and Guhan Venkatu. 2014. “Trimmed-Mean Inflation Statistics: Just Hit the One in the Middle.” Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Working Paper No. 12-17R. https://doi.org/10.26509/frbc-wp-201217r