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News Release Information

22-2324-BOS
Tuesday, December 13, 2022

Contacts Technical information: Media contact:
  • (617) 565-4141

Consumer Price Index, Boston-Cambridge-Newton — November 2022

Area prices were up 0.6 percent for the two months ending in November and 7.0 percent over the year

Prices in the Boston area, as measured by the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U), increased 0.6 percent for the two months ending in November 2022, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Regional Commissioner William J. Sibley noted that higher prices for energy were partly offset by lower prices for non-food items. (Data in this report are not seasonally adjusted. Accordingly, bi-monthly changes may reflect seasonal influences.)

Over the last 12 months, the CPI-U increased 7.0 percent. (See chart 1 and table A.) The index for all items less food and energy rose 4.7 percent over the year. Energy prices increased 29.5 percent, largely the result of higher prices for household energy. Food prices increased 10.8 percent. (See table 1.)

Food

Food prices inched down 0.1 percent for the two months ending in November. A 1.4-percent decline in prices for food away from home was largely offset by a 0.7-percent rise in prices for food at home. Prices rose in four of six grocery categories.

Over the year, food prices increased 10.8 percent. Prices for food at home rose 12.4 percent, and prices for food away from home increased 8.2 percent.

Energy

The energy index rose 12.9 percent for the two months ending in November. The advance was mainly due to a 20.5-percent rise in prices for household energy, with higher prices for electricity (23.9 percent), natural gas (18.6 percent), and fuel oil. Prices for gasoline increased 1.3 percent. 

Energy prices increased 29.5 percent over the year, led by a 40.9-percent advance in household energy. Higher prices for electricity (46.7 percent), natural gas (28.6 percent), and fuel oil contributed to the rise in household energy prices. Gasoline prices rose 12.9 percent.

All items less food and energy

The index for all items less food and energy fell 0.4 percent in the latest two-month period, primarily due to a seasonal decline in apparel prices (-9.4 percent) as well as a 2.5-percent decrease in prices for new and used motor vehicles. These declines were partially offset by 0.5-percent rise in shelter prices.

Over the year, the index for all items less food and energy increased 4.7 percent. Components contributing to the increase included shelter (4.9 percent), medical care (5.8 percent), and household furnishings and operations (8.9 percent). Within shelter, increases in owners’ equivalent rent (5.8 percent) and residential rent (6.2 percent) were tempered by a decline in prices for lodging away from home.

Table A. Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH, CPI-U 2-month and 12-month percent changes, all items index, not seasonally adjusted
Month20182019202020212022
2-month12-month2-month12-month2-month12-month2-month12-month2-month12-month

January

1.12.80.52.50.62.20.70.51.66.3

March

0.93.60.52.10.11.80.91.31.97.3

May

0.03.20.22.3-1.00.60.83.21.17.5

July

0.33.40.02.00.20.81.24.30.77.0

September

1.23.30.21.10.10.6-0.14.00.98.1

November

-0.43.20.72.10.40.41.75.30.67.0

The January 2023 Consumer Price Index for the Boston area is scheduled to be released on February 14, 2023.


Technical Note

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is a measures of the average change in prices over time in a fixed market basket of goods and services. The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes CPIs for two population groups: (1) a CPI for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) which covers approximately 93 percent of the total U.S. population and (2) a CPI for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) which covers approximately 29 percent of the total U.S. population. The CPI-U includes, in addition to wage earners and clerical workers, groups such as professional, managerial, and technical workers, the self-employed, short-term workers, the unemployed, and retirees and others not in the labor force.

The CPI is based on prices of food, clothing, shelter, and fuels, transportation fares, charges for doctors' and dentists' services, drugs, and the other goods and services that people buy for day-to-day living. Each month, prices are collected in 75 urban areas across the country from about 6,000 housing units and approximately 22,000 retail establishments—department stores, supermarkets, hospitals, filling stations, and other types of stores and service establishments. All taxes directly associated with the purchase and use of items are included in the index.

The index measures price changes from a designated reference date; for most of the CPI-U the reference base is 1982-84 equals 100. An increase of 7 percent from the reference base, for example, is shown as 107.000.  Alternatively, that relationship can also be expressed as the price of a base period market basket of goods and services rising from $100 to $107. For further details see the CPI home page on the internet at www.bls.gov/cpi and the BLS Handbook of Methods, Chapter 17, The Consumer Price Index, available on the Internet at www.bls.gov/opub/hom/cpi/.

In calculating the index, price changes for the various items in each location are averaged together with weights that represent their importance in the spending of the appropriate population group. Local data are then combined to obtain a U.S. city average. Because the sample size of a local area is smaller, the local area index is subject to substantially more sampling and other measurement error than the national index. In addition, local indexes are not adjusted for seasonal influences. As a result, local area indexes show greater volatility than the national index, although their long-term trends are quite similar. NOTE: Area indexes do not measure differences in the level of prices between cities; they only measure the average change in prices for each area since the base period.

The Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass.-N.H. Core Based Statistical Area covered in this release is comprised of Essex, Middlesex, Norfolk, Plymouth, Suffolk Counties in Massachusetts and Rockingham and Strafford Counties in New Hampshire.

Information from this release will be made available to sensory impaired individuals upon request. Voice phone: 202-691-5200; Telecommunications Relay Service: 7-1-1.

Table 1. Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U): Indexes and percent changes for selected periods, Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH, not seasonally adjusted
(1982-84=100 unless otherwise noted)
Item and GroupIndexesPercent change from-
Sept.
2022
Nov.
2022
Nov.
2021
Sept.
2022

Expenditure category

All items

318.800320.7027.00.6

All items (1967=100)

926.601932.131  

Food and beverages

327.202327.19910.40.0

Food

331.888331.68110.8-0.1

Food at home

301.967304.16012.40.7

Cereals and bakery products

356.916362.79011.11.6

Meats, poultry, fish, and eggs

321.796321.2258.2-0.2

Dairy and related products

349.805360.10121.32.9

Fruits and vegetables

374.926369.4685.3-1.5

Nonalcoholic beverages and beverage materials(1)

190.860191.97819.70.6

Other food at home

237.552241.65115.81.7

Food away from home

383.666378.3488.2-1.4

Alcoholic beverages

279.156281.6515.40.9

Housing

332.273340.1128.62.4

Shelter

384.018385.8604.90.5

Rent of primary residence

399.536403.5376.21.0

Owners' equivalent rent of residences(2)

414.602418.4585.80.9

Owners' equivalent rent of primary residence(2)

414.602418.4585.80.9

Fuels and utilities

403.489474.90939.017.7

Household energy

338.387407.85440.920.5

Energy services

352.832431.04540.422.2

Electricity

390.175483.49746.723.9

Utility (piped) gas service

272.438323.10428.618.6

Household furnishings and operations

150.086151.1018.90.7

Apparel

140.637127.485-0.1-9.4

Transportation

235.205232.2655.4-1.2

Private transportation

243.484240.4684.1-1.2

New and used motor vehicles(3)

138.642135.1593.0-2.5

New vehicles(1)

239.197240.9743.90.7

Used cars and trucks(1)

477.666451.981-3.5-5.4

Motor fuel

330.546334.94813.11.3

Gasoline (all types)

326.708330.84112.91.3

Gasoline, unleaded regular(4)

315.222319.43212.01.3

Gasoline, unleaded midgrade(4)(5)

364.567365.32017.30.2

Gasoline, unleaded premium(4)

355.001358.17218.60.9

Medical care

748.394744.9515.8-0.5

Recreation(3)

120.763119.7913.3-0.8

Education and communication(3)

178.096177.7571.2-0.2

Tuition, other school fees, and child care(1)

1,464.6801,464.6802.20.0

Other goods and services

594.997597.53810.90.4

Commodity and service group

All items

318.800320.7027.00.6

Commodities

229.750228.0107.2-0.8

Commodities less food and beverages

180.321178.1345.4-1.2

Nondurables less food and beverages

234.150232.99110.0-0.5

Durables

130.400127.9181.3-1.9

Services

399.203404.3836.91.3

Special aggregate indexes

All items less medical care

302.370304.4577.10.7

All items less shelter

296.071298.0368.20.7

Commodities less food

184.452182.3595.4-1.1

Nondurables

279.444278.82010.3-0.2

Nondurables less food

236.473235.5419.7-0.4

Services less rent of shelter(2)

435.562445.4849.32.3

Services less medical care services

374.245379.9737.11.5

Energy

332.423375.20029.512.9

All items less energy

323.143322.0785.4-0.3

All items less food and energy

323.233322.0394.7-0.4

Footnotes
(1) Indexes on a January 1978=100 base.
(2) Indexes on a November 1982=100 base.
(3) Indexes on a December 1997=100 base.
(4) Special index based on a substantially smaller sample.
(5) Indexes on a December 1993=100 base.

 

Last Modified Date: Tuesday, December 13, 2022