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Facilities for Sensory I mp a,ired <br />Information from this release will be made available to sensory impaired individuals upon request. <br />Voice phone: 202-691-5200, Fed~ral Relay Services: 1-800-877-8339. <br />Brief Explanation of the CPI <br />The Consumer Price Index (CPI).is a measure of the average change in prices over time of goods and <br />services purchased by households. The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes CPIs for two population <br />groups: (1) the CPI for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W), which covers households of <br />wage earners and clerical workers that comprise approximately 28 percent of the total population and (2) <br />the CPI for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) and the Chained CPI for All Urban Consumers (C-CPI-U), <br />which covers approximately 89 percent of the total population and includes, in addition to wage earners <br />and clerical worker households, groups such as professional, managerial, and technical workers, the self- <br />employed, short-term workers, the unemployed, and retirees and others not in the labor force. <br />The CPls are based on prices off()od, clothing, shelter, fuels, transportation fares, charges for doctors' <br />and dentists' services, drugs, and bther goods and services that people buy for day-to-day living. Prices <br />are collected each month in 87 urpan ~reas across the country from about 6,000 housing units and <br />approximately 24,000 retail establishments-department stores, supermarkets, hospitals, filling stations, <br />and other types of stores and service establishments. All taxes directly associated with the purchase and <br />use of items are included in the index. Prices of fuels and a few other items are obtained every month in <br />all 87 locations. Prices of most other commodities and services are collected every month in the three <br />largest geographic areas and every other month in other areas. Prices of most goods and services are <br />obtained by personal visits or telephone calls of the Bureau's trained representatives. <br />In calculating the index, price changes for the various items in each location are averaged together with <br />weights, which represent their importance in the spending of the appropriate population group. Local <br />data are then combined to obtain ~ U.S. city average. For the CPI-U and CPI-W separate indexes are <br />also published by size of city, by region of the country, for cross-classifications of regions and <br />population-size classes, and for 27 local areas. Area indexes do not measure differences in the level of <br />prices among cities; they only measure the average change in prices for each area since the base period. <br />For the C-CPI-U data are issued only at the national level. It is important to note that the CPI-U and <br />CPI-Ware considered final when released, but the C-CPI-U is issued in preliminary form and subject to <br />two annual revisions. <br />The index measures price change from a designed reference date. For the CPI-U and the CPI-W the <br />reference base is 1982-84 equals 100. The reference base for the C-CPI-U is December 1999 equals 100. <br />An increase of 16.5 percent from the reference base, for example, is shown as 116.500. This change can <br />also be expressed in dollars as follows: the price of a base period market basket of goods and services in <br />the CPI has risen from $10 in 1982-84 to $11.65. <br />For further details visit the CPI home page on the Internet at www.bls.gov/cpil or contact our CPl <br />InfOlmation and Analysis Section on (202) 691-7000 . <br />-5 ·