The Core Problem

Index numbers assume readers understand:

  1. What the base year is
  2. That bases change over time
  3. How to calculate percentage change correctly

Most people don’t. The system works for economists talking to economists. It’s fragile for public communication.

The Two Traps

Trap 1: Wrong percentage calculation

Index goes from 125 → 132.5.

  • Wrong: “That’s 7.5%”
  • Right: (132.5 - 125) / 125 = 6%

Trap 2: Comparing across different base years

“CPI was 120 in 2010, now it’s 108… prices fell?”

Maybe. Or maybe the base year changed. Without checking, you can’t know.

Why It Usually Doesn’t Cause Chaos

Most reporting uses percentage change (“inflation was 3.4%”), not raw index levels. Percentage change is base-agnostic—same calculation regardless of base year.

When It Breaks Down

ContextRisk
Official statistics (StatCan)Low—base year documented
News headlinesMedium—base year often omitted
Comparing old vs. new articlesHigh—bases may differ silently

The Takeaway

When you see a raw index number, ask: base year?

When comparing index numbers across time from different sources, verify they’re using the same base before drawing conclusions.


North: Where this comes from

East: What’s the opposite?

South: Where this leads

West: What’s similar?