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CPI unlikely to reflect the price experience of individual households The CPI is designed to measure changes in retail prices experienced by all metropolitan private households in aggregate. The composition of the basket and the relative importance of items in it relate to this population group as a whole - it represents the expenditures of all households, not the expenditure pattern of the average household or of any particular household type or size. The basket comprises all consumer goods and services acquired over a twelve month period. It includes items acquired infrequently by an individual household (e.g. major electrical appliances, new motor vehicles), items that are acquired almost daily by all households (e.g. bread and milk) and items that are only available at certain times of the year. The basket includes, for example, both rent payments of renting households and the amounts paid by owner occupier households for the purchase of their principal residence—no individual household can incur both expenses at the same time. Changes in the CPI are therefore unlikely to reflect exactly the price experience of particular households. CPI cannot be used to measure price levels The CPI is also not designed to measure price levels; rather its purpose is to measure changes in prices over time. While price levels in country regions often differ from those in metropolitan areas (some higher and others lower), the factors influencing price movements generally tend to be similar. Therefore the CPI can be expected to provide a reasonable indication of the changes in prices in Australia as a whole in the longer term.
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