Fiabilidad de los datos del PIB y su impacto en la política de la Fed y el sentimiento del mercado

Generado por agente de IAIsaac LaneRevisado porAInvest News Editorial Team
sábado, 20 de diciembre de 2025, 5:23 am ET2 min de lectura

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) has long been the cornerstone of U.S. inflation measurement, guiding Federal Reserve policy and shaping investor expectations. Yet, in 2024–2025, growing skepticism about its reliability has emerged, fueled by methodological flaws, data collection challenges, and alternative inflation measures. These issues are not merely academic-they are reshaping how policymakers and investors interpret inflation, with significant implications for markets and economic stability.

Methodological Flaws and Data Distortions

The CPI's methodology has faced sharp criticism, particularly in its treatment of housing inflation. The owners' equivalent rent (OER) component, which accounts for 26% of the CPI basket, has been a focal point. In October 2025, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) carried forward September data for October after a government shutdown disrupted fieldwork,

. Compounding this, .

Broader concerns persist about the CPI's ability to adapt to technological and behavioral shifts. in consumer spending patterns and product innovation. Meanwhile, suggest the CPI underestimates inflation by allowing substitution toward cheaper goods. than official figures.

Fed Policy Adjustments and Market Reactions

The Federal Reserve has acknowledged these challenges, pivoting to the core PCE index-a broader measure of personal consumption expenditures-as its primary inflation gauge.

from 3.1% in 2025 to 2.0% by 2028, alongside a projected federal funds rate easing from 3.6% to 3.1% by 2027. This measured normalization underscores the Fed's reliance on alternative data to navigate CPI uncertainties.

Market reactions have mirrored this cautious stance.

, signaling optimism about a 2026 easing cycle. However, the government shutdown's disruption of CPI data collection-forcing the BLS to use alternative modeling-introduced volatility. , with two-year Treasury yields reacting sharply to unexpected CPI increases. This sensitivity reflects the Fed's renewed focus on inflation control and investors' heightened scrutiny of data reliability.

Investor Skepticism and Alternative Inflation Measures

Investor skepticism has driven a parallel reliance on alternative inflation measures.

than the official CPI-U in 2005. In 2025, this divergence intensified as . Private-sector measures like PriceStats and OpenBrand further highlight upward price pressures from tariffs, even as official CPI trends abate. from tariffs, even as official CPI trends abate.

These alternative metrics are reshaping investor strategies. Infrastructure investments, which offer inflation-linked cash flows, have gained traction as a hedge against hidden inflation risks.

during inflationary periods. Yet, the broader lesson is clear: in an era of methodological flux and political turbulence, transparency in inflation measurement is not just a technical issue-it is a cornerstone of economic stability.

author avatar
Isaac Lane

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