When I see a
chart in the New York Times that tries to tell me something that I know is demonstrably not true, I have to stand up and say something. And when I see other
intelligent and insightful bloggers drawing
inaccurate conclusions from this same chart, I doubly have to stand up and say something.
Have a look for yourself:
--Source: New York Times, 5/19/2009 Interesting, isn't it? I can imagine two types of reactions to this chart:
1) Beer is cheaper than ever,or,
2) Healthy fruits and veggies are more expensive than ever. Ergo, we've got to do something about it... like raise taxes on soda. Here's the problem: both conclusions are fallacious. This chart is a textbook example of how authorities in the media can unethically render information to make any argument they want.
It's up to us, as intelligent and critical consumers of information, to question the authority of our media and identify situations where our views and opinions might be subject to manipulation. And this chart, even though it supports an ideologically attractive conclusion, is an
excellent example of manipulated information.
Let me go over the various problems with this chart. First, inflation data is notoriously messy: The basket of goods that the CPI uses to compare prices changes regularly, and the CPI also assumes we cannot substitute goods (e.g., if beef becomes more expensive, we bias our purchases towards chicken).
We also don't know to what extent the increased popularity of organic foods have skewed the past few years' worth of fruit and veggie prices to the upside, again complicating comparisons with soda or beer which saw no such secular trend.
Further, year-over-year CPI data isn't daisy-chained together. Sure, you can compare this year's prices to last year's. You can, with slightly less accuracy, compare prices this year to prices five years ago.
But when you start examining compounded price changes over ten or twenty years, comparability declines monstrously. Thus you can get into big trouble assuming that CPI data enables you to compare, with any accuracy, the compounding prices of two varying baskets of items (say, soda versus vegetables) over a 31-year period.
Here's another question: what kind of average annual change would it require to cause vegetables over a 31-year period to increase 41% over inflation? Answer: approximately 1.01% per year. Over a data series this long, a 1% annual delta is
almost guaranteed to be statistically insignificant, despite the fact that it looks nicely compelling when rendered graphically. In reality, the "vegetables" line on this chart likely tells us very little.
An even bigger fallacy: the chart gives no starting prices, only relative price changes.
If you want to compare the prices of two things over time, you must know the starting price. I'll illustrate with an extreme example. What if in 1978, in real terms, a beer cost $10 and lettuce cost $1 a head? Well, this chart would claim that today beer costs $8.50 (again, in real terms), and lettuce costs $1.41. Can we now conclude that lettuce is now much more expensive than beer?
The relative change in these items has no meaning unless you tell us what they cost when you began your data series. Let's also attack this chart by looking at the real world. Here's a question for any readers who grew up in the 1970s: how much was a (glass) bottle of Coke in a vending machine? A dime? (Some of you might say a nickel, but let's not bully our chartmaker too badly here). What does a Coke cost in a vending machine now? $1.50?
If we are to believe this chart, then veggies would have increased by a factor of 31.7x since 1978, and that would imply that the 99c 3-lb. bag of carrots in your grocery store used to cost 3.1c in 1978! Does that pass the smell test? [
If you want to see my math on this, feel free to email me.]
By the way, let me know if you would like to add in a hedonic adjustment to account for the change of your 10c glass bottle of Coke into a cruddy $1.50 aluminum can.
Whenever I'm reading an article and I see a compelling and highly counterintuitive chart like this, I try and recite to myself one of the oldest truths of the mass media:
beware of charts--they tell particularly persuasive lies. I also try to ask myself a question that I've learned from reading
The Last Psychiatrist (one of my favorite non-food blogs):
What does the author want to be true?Well, after a critical read of the article, it's clear that
this author wants you to believe that taxing soda is a wonderful idea. And naturally he's going to try and build an argument, complete with this persuasive-looking (and possibly data-mined, although I can't prove it) chart, to convince readers that healthy foods have increased in price dramatically compared to unhealthy foods, thus making it all sound so
sensible that we right this wrong by taxing unhealthy foods.
Of course, if you are a reader of Casual Kitchen (especially if you've read my essay
Stacked Costs and Second Order Foods and are familiar with the many
laughably cheap veggie-centered recipes here),
you should see this chart for what it is: a falsehood, rendered graphically, to support a biased conclusion held by the author. Here's the ironic part: before I read this article, I would have leaned toward supporting a soda tax. But this article and this awful chart made me question the motives of this author, and by extension I'm now beginning to question the tax itself. After all, if the truth needs to be massaged to make a case for a soda tax, maybe it isn't such a good idea after all.
Related Posts:
A Recession-Proof Guide to Saving Money on FoodTop Ten Most Popular Posts of Casual KitchenA Rebuttal of "The Last Bite"Mastering Kitchen Setup Costs: The Economics of Cooking, Part 1How can I support Casual Kitchen?
If you enjoy reading Casual Kitchen, tell a friend and spread the word! You can also support me by purchasing items from Amazon.com
via links on this site, or by linking to me or subscribing to my RSS feed. Finally, you can consider submitting this article, or any other article you particularly enjoyed here, to bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, digg or stumbleupon. Thank you for your support!