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Forecasting Core Inflation and Its Goods, Housing, and Supercore Components

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  • Todd E. Clark

    (Johns Hopkins University, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)

  • Matthew V. Gordon

    (University of Pennsylvania)

  • Saeed Zaman

    (Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland)

Abstract

This paper examines the forecasting efficacy and implications of the recently popular breakdown of core inflation into three components: goods excluding food and energy, services excluding energy and housing, and housing. A comprehensive historical evaluation of the accuracy of point and density forecasts from a range of models and approaches shows that a BVAR with stochastic volatility in aggregate core inflation, its three components, and wage growth is an effective tool for forecasting inflation’s components as well as aggregate core inflation. Looking ahead, the model’s baseline projection puts core inflation at 2.7 percent in 2026, well below its 2023 level but still elevated relative to the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent objective. The probability that core inflation will return to 2 percent or less is much higher when conditioning on goods or nonhousing services inflation slowing to prepandemic levels than when conditioning on these components remaining above the same thresholds. Scenario analysis indicates that slower wage growth will likely be associated with reduced inflation in all three components, especially goods and nonhousing services, helping to return core inflation to near the 2 percent target by 2026.

Suggested Citation

  • Todd E. Clark & Matthew V. Gordon & Saeed Zaman, 2025. "Forecasting Core Inflation and Its Goods, Housing, and Supercore Components," International Journal of Central Banking, International Journal of Central Banking, vol. 21(4), pages 351-403, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:ijc:ijcjou:y:2025:q:4:a:6
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