CPI And The PCE Deflator

 | Jun 26, 2014 12:42AM ET

On Thursday, the US Department of Commerce will publish the May estimate of personal consumption expenditure deflator. Last week, investors learned that the consumer price index rose at its fastest rate in two years.
Since extraordinary monetary policy measures were taken, some observers have warned of inflation risks lurking around every corner. With CPI rising above 2%, could they finally be right?
Not so fast. The Federal Reserve's 2% inflation target does not apply to the consumer price index. Since mid-2012, the Fed has identified the core PCE deflator as its preferred inflation measure. There is a significant difference. The PCE measure of inflation tends to be lower than the CPI measure.