Marc De Mesel wrote:
I think your accusation that I cherry pick is false. I think I have given the biggest compilation of historical prices publicly available anywhere. Unless you can point me to a bigger compilation, please call it empirical evidence.
Maybe I'm not seeing the rest, but I'm just looking at the stuff you posted here:
http://gyroscopicinvesting.com/forum/pe ... /#msg81906
Mostly you gave price histories for fast food, petroleum-based fuels, precious metals, real estate, and one particular car. That's not very comprehensive. The price history of one car is not satisfactory; we need price histories for ALL cars because people don't just buy Corvettes. The price history of Corn Flakes isn't satisfactory; we need the price history of ALL breakfast cereals because people eat more cereals than just Corn Flakes. And so on and so forth.
As a result, you are basing your conclusions on a small number of data points. Such a small data set consisting of only 13 points and excluding major categories like water, gasoline, computer hardware, computer software, telephone service, furniture, clothing, news service, and health care (which in the USA would actually be more favorable to your position). Your data is maybe representative of someone who eats a lot of unhealthy food, buys muscle cars, owns lot of precious metals and an extremely poorly-insulated house heated and cooled with petroleum-based fuels. That doesn't describe me or anyone I know.
Pointedstick wrote:
BPP data? There is no price data, only conclusions. They offer no price evidence in support of their inflation estimates whatsoever. If you value evidence mine is the only you have gotten.
The data they use can be found here:
http://statestreetglobalmarkets.com/res ... ricestats/
Marc De Mesel wrote:
Yes, I do am having a bad day. I feel frustrated and for some reason this forum, and this discussion, seemed like a good channel to let the anger out. I'm sorry if I treated you unfairly or disrespectful Pointedstick.

Thanks for noticing.
I'm angry with the way some people ignore, minimise, derail or dismiss my work here. I have decided to start calling them out in a confrontational manner. Agressive, I agree, but required to not be delved under BS.
Let me turn this around and say that if you're failing to convince people of your position, it's not their fault, but rather yours. Getting angry at people you're trying to convince for not being convinced is not likely to produce the desired results.

Human behavior is economic behavior. The particulars may vary, but competition for limited resources remains a constant.
- CEO Nwabudike Morgan