CorrlensCorrlens
Correlate

Correlation Analysis

Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average vs Unemployment Rate

CPIAUCSL vs UNRATE

+0.053

Weak positive

When one moves up, the other tends to follow.

Jan 1, 1948 — Feb 1, 2026Daily937 observationsFREDFRED

AI Analysis

The weak correlation between the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the unemployment rate suggests that changes in inflation do not consistently predict movements in unemployment, indicating limited direct relationship between these two economic indicators. However, with unemployment leading CPI by about six months, there may be a lagged effect where shifts in the job market could influence inflation trends, although the practical significance of this relationship is minimal given the overall low correlation. Investors should be cautious, as the low alignment and variability in the data imply that relying solely on these indicators for economic forecasting may be misleading.

Timing Offset

y leads x by 6 periods

UNRATE tends to move before CPIAUCSL.

-6-5-4-3-2-10+1+2+3+4+5+6

Correlation at each lag offset (periods). Peak marked with dot.

Peak correlation at offset: +0.389 (13 lags scanned)

R-Squared

0.0%

Share of variance in one series explained by the other.

Trend Agreement

45.7%

How often both series moved in the same direction period-to-period.

Overlap Quality

937

Deep shared window — 937 usable pairs.

Significance

n.s.

95% CI: [-0.344, 0.313] (approximate)

Time Series

Rebased to 100

Green: CPIAUCSLGray: UNRATE36 of 937 points (sampled)

Scatter

XY Regression

-0.7050100150200250300350351.82.4934567899.91Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City AverageUnemployment RateData pointsFit (r = 0.053)

Pipeline

Data quality details

Pipeline Summary

937 paired observations survived the daily window.

Raw input

949

938

Normalized

949

938

Prepared

949

938

Aligned

937

937

Invalid removed

0

A: 0 / B: 0

Duplicates removed

0

A: 0 / B: 0

Alignment drops

13

A: 12 / B: 1

Series A

CPIAUCSL

Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items in U.S. City Average

FRED · 949 raw → 949 prepared

Series B

UNRATE

Unemployment Rate

FRED · 938 raw → 938 prepared

Sign agreement

100.0%

How often both values share the same sign.

Zero crossings

1

Estimated crossover points between normalized spreads.

Slope

-0.0003

Linear regression slope.

Intercept

5.6141

Linear regression intercept.

Saved 13 hours ago · ID: fred-cpiaucsl-vs-fred-unrate-daily-20260406-s5v73q