US CPI3.9%▲ +0.6DE CPI2.2%▼ -0.1UK CPI3.4%▼ -0.3JP CPI-0.4%▲ +0.3FR CPI0.8%■ 0.0CN CPI-0.1%■ 0.0IN CPI3.0%▲ +0.4EU HICP3.0%▲ +0.5GCI194.5▲ +25.4GFPI135.5▲ +3.4US CPI3.9%▲ +0.6DE CPI2.2%▼ -0.1UK CPI3.4%▼ -0.3JP CPI-0.4%▲ +0.3FR CPI0.8%■ 0.0CN CPI-0.1%■ 0.0IN CPI3.0%▲ +0.4EU HICP3.0%▲ +0.5GCI194.5▲ +25.4GFPI135.5▲ +3.4

Global Macro Commodity Canvas

Isolate and emphasize trends via cards. Click a card to switch the active indicator.

Global Commodity Index
->
194.5
Latest Value Index+42.0%
Global Food Price Index
->
135.5
Latest Value Index+38.4%
Period High230.1
Period Low91.1
Net Change+42.0%
Offline: Loaded Sandbox Global Index Framework.

Sovereign Inflation Matrix

Cross-country consumer price index (CPI YoY) mapping matrix via localized asset streams.

USA
US CPI YoY
3.9%
▲ +1.01 MoM
Germany
DE CPI YoY
2.2%
▲ +0.39 MoM
UK
UK CPI YoY
3.4%
▲ +0.43 MoM
Japan
JP CPI YoY
-0.4%
▲ +0.76 MoM
France
FR CPI YoY
0.8%
▼ -0.80 MoM
China
CN CPI YoY
-0.1%
▼ -0.59 MoM
India
IN CPI YoY
3.0%
▼ -0.48 MoM
Eurozone
EU HICP YoY
3.0%
▲ +1.25 MoM
Offline Mode: Loaded calibrated sandbox sovereign framework.

Understanding Inflation

Simple explanations of inflation, prices, and global economic trends.

Frequently Asked Questions

Clarifying global inflation dynamics and data interpretation.

Why does global inflation vary so significantly by country? +

Variations in inflation are driven by domestic fiscal policies, energy dependency, supply chain integration, and the specific consumption weights within each nation's CPI basket.

How does a weak currency impact domestic inflation? +

A depreciating currency increases the cost of imported goods (imported inflation). As raw materials and consumer imports become more expensive, these costs are eventually passed on to the final retail price.

What is the "Base Effect" in inflation reporting? +

The base effect refers to the impact of the price levels from the same time last year on current inflation rates. A sharp rise in prices last year can make current inflation look deceptively low, even if prices remain high.

Why do central banks target a specific inflation rate? +

Most central banks target around 2% inflation to encourage spending and investment while avoiding the economic stagnation associated with deflation or the instability caused by hyperinflation.

Is GDP growth always correlated with higher inflation? +

Not necessarily. While strong demand can drive growth and inflation, economies can experience "stagflation" where inflation remains high despite sluggish GDP growth due to supply-side constraints.

About the Data
  • Inflation and economic indicators displayed on this website are based on publicly available datasets and historical economic records, including data provided through FRED and other open statistical sources.
  • Most indicators are updated periodically depending on source availability and publication schedules. Update timing may vary across countries and economic categories.
  • Charts, rankings, and country pages reflect the latest available data currently accessible through the underlying public datasets.
Public Economic DataHistorical IndicatorsGlobal Inflation TrendsPeriodically Updated