Back

#core-inflation

2 APIs with this tag

Moldova Inflation & CPI API

Official consumer-price inflation for the Republic of Moldova — sourced live from the National Bureau of Statistics of Moldova via its public PxWeb statbank (tables PRE012600, PRE012200 and PRE012800). The cpi endpoint returns the latest reported month with headline year-on-year inflation and the month-on-month price change. The series endpoint returns the monthly history of year-on-year and month-on-month inflation, parameterised by the number of months. The groups endpoint breaks the latest month down across the major divisions — food goods, non-food goods and services — each with its year-on-year rate, showing where price pressure sits. The core endpoint returns Moldova's core-inflation measures, computed by excluding volatile components such as food, energy and regulated prices, each with year-on-year and month-on-month change — the gauges central banks watch for underlying trend. All figures are published directly by the statistics bureau, not modelled, and refreshed from source behind a short server-side cache with keep-warm. Ideal for macro and emerging-market dashboards, CIS and EU-candidate economics trackers, cost-of-living and monetary-policy tools, and fintech needing a clean structured inflation feed for a market the big aggregators rarely cover at monthly resolution. Live keyless upstream. 5 endpoints.

api.oanor.com/moldova-cpi-api

CPI Inflation Rate API

The headline consumer-price inflation print for every major economy, broken into its core and its drivers, live from the OECD's official price statistics — no key. Consumer-price inflation is the single most-watched macro number on earth: the gauge every central bank targets, the thing that sets the real value of wages, debts and savings, and a number whose surprises move bonds, currencies and equities within seconds. This API serves the year-on-year national CPI the way it is actually reported, for ~50 economies — and crucially it does not stop at the headline. For each economy it also serves the core rate (all items excluding food and energy, the measure policymakers really steer by), plus the food, energy and services rates themselves. That decomposition tells you whether a reading is a temporary food/energy shock or a stickier, demand-driven core problem: headline above core means volatile food/energy are pushing prices up; headline below core means they are dragging the print down while underlying inflation stays hot. The board endpoint ranks economies by headline inflation with core alongside; core ranks by the core rate; country gives one economy's full breakdown with the headline-vs-core read. Each reading carries its own month and discontinued series are filtered out, so the board is genuinely current. This is the realised-inflation cut — distinct from the inflation calculator (arithmetic from a rate you supply, not live data), from consumer inflation expectations (a survey of what households think prices will do, not what they did), and from unit labour costs and wages. Rates are percent year-on-year; figures are monthly.

api.oanor.com/cpiinflation-api