01
100% pass-through ceiling
Every estimate assumes that 100% of upstream cost changes flow through to the consumer. This is deliberately an upper bound. In reality, governments subsidize, retailers absorb margins, and supply chains adapt. The ceiling tells you the worst-case scenario, not the most likely one.
02
Direct vs indirect exposure
Each consumer category (bread, fuel, cooking oil, etc.) is mapped to a set of upstream factors (wheat price, crude oil, fertilizer, freight). The exposure coefficient for each category-factor pair reflects how much of the final product cost is attributable to that input. These coefficients are derived from USDA cost-of-production surveys and FAO food balance sheets.
03
FX and import adjustment
For import-dependent countries, currency depreciation amplifies the local-currency cost of dollar-denominated commodities. The FX adjustment multiplies the commodity price change by the degree of depreciation. Countries that are net exporters of a commodity receive a dampened or zero adjustment for that factor.
04
Lag profiles
Price shocks do not hit consumers instantly. The model supports four lag profiles: Immediate (fuel, forex-sensitive goods), 3-month (perishables, short supply chains), 6-month (processed foods, regional supply chains), and 12-month (staples with strategic reserves, long-term contracts). Each profile weights the factor change over the appropriate time horizon.
05
Country-level resolution
The model operates at the country level, not the city or province level. Within-country variation (urban vs rural, coastal vs inland) can be significant but is not captured. We chose country-level resolution because the macro inputs (exchange rates, import dependency ratios, commodity prices) are most reliably available at that granularity.
06
Known limitations
The model does not account for government price controls, subsidy programs, speculative hoarding, supply chain disruptions beyond commodity costs, or local market competition dynamics. It underestimates impacts in countries with structural currency crises (e.g., Türkiye, Nigeria) where parallel exchange rates diverge from official rates.