In the U.S. Supply Chains and Inflation report, we label the y-axis for the charts that illustrate the five indexes with a generic “Less/More” description, as shown above. This means that positive index scores correspond to more of an activity (e.g., more trading down), while negative scores correspond to less of an activity (e.g., less trading down). For instance, the 2.6 value for Price Sensitivity in May 2022 reflects the fact that, on average across product/service categories, the share of adults who walked away from a purchase when the price exceeded their expectations was nearly 3 percentage points higher than the share who made the purchase anyway. In contrast, in April 2022, the share of adults who walked away from a purchase in this situation was about 11 points higher than the share who completed the purchase.
An index score of 0, thus, represents a “neutral” value for each concept. Below, we describe how we arrive at this conclusion by building up the net shares of responses at the product/service category level into an aggregate index number. First, however, note that not only are comparisons across indexes for a given month informative, so are comparisons across time for a given index. As an example, the chart above shows that price sensitivity, substitutability and delivery delays decreased from April to May, while unavailability and purchasing difficulty increased.
At the product/service category level, a neutral value means that each of the two possible outcomes for each index had an equal share of responses.
1) A neutral value for Unavailability at the product/service category level denotes that there were equal shares of adults who were not able to purchase a product/service because it was unavailable and who were able to successfully complete a purchase for a price close to what they expected to pay.
2) A neutral value for Price Sensitivity at the product/service category level denotes that there were equal shares of adults who walked away from a purchase and who decided to go ahead with a purchase when the price exceeded their expectations.
3) A neutral value for Substitutability at the product/service category level denotes that there were equal shares of adults who purchased a lower-priced substitute and who decided not to purchase.
4) A neutral value for Purchasing Difficulty at the product/service category level denotes that there were equal shares of adults who had difficulty obtaining a product or service and who had no trouble finding that product or service. In both cases, however, the purchase was still made.
5) A neutral value for Delivery Delays at the product/service category level denotes that there were equal shares of adults who said deliveries of online orders were slower than last month and who said deliveries were faster than last month.
We aggregate the net shares of responses at the product/service category level into an index for each of the five concepts by weighting them according to their relative importance in the Consumer Price Index. In the aggregate, an index score of 0 corresponds to a “neutral” result, in that the weighted average outcome for the concept being measured exhibits equal shares of responses for each alternative. This same procedure can then be applied to different demographics and geographies.
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