Show me a currency that has the exact same inflation figures every month for a single year and I'll send you a bitcoin.
Or alternately, just view a currency index like the DXY to see very closely that nothing comes close to this.
Here is what some real inflation data looks like (as viewedin terms of CPI). It can't even decide if it wants to stay positive or negative on a monthly basis.
> Show me a currency that has the exact same inflation figures every month for a single year and I'll send you a bitcoin.
That's strictly not a goal. The goal is a long-to-medium term target average.
> Or alternately, just view a currency index like the DXY to see very closely that nothing comes close to this.
DXY has little to do with domestic spending power, only the relative strength of one currency compared to a basket of other foreign currencies when spending abroad.
High vs low DXY measures the relative pricing of imports vs exports. Strong dollar means cheaper imports. Weak dollar means more competitive exports. This isn't really inflation related, it's a separate target. After all, I believe every central bank in the DXY basket has the same inflation targets to within a reasonable band. [1]
People overwhelmingly spend within the country not abroad.
> It can't even decide if it wants to stay positive or negative on a monthly basis.
That monetary policy takes time to be reflected in measurements in a multi-trillion dollar system isn't a bug.
The data you show me looks pretty. darn. good.
> ... and I'll send you a bitcoin.
Please don't. I care about the earth too much to have you blow 22 days (650kWh) of electricity and 100g of e-waste on you sending me one. If I wanted a Bitcoin I'd have plenty. You're welcome to sell it at an exchange, and donate the proceeds to an environmental organization like Ducks Unlimited [2].
That of course has the double effect of reducing the price, which reduces the quantity of electricity wasted on its production and security, which reduces CO2 emissions -- while also saving the wetlands.
You still haven't provided any data of any country showing consistent inflation. Hell, do it over a 10 year period annually. You still can't. No bitcoin for you and the wetlands.
Again, the goal is not to have the number exactly on every single year, it's to have it within a range. It's within a range. It's within a pretty tight range. Mission accomplished, even in light of the crazy pandemic years and everything else that's happened in the last 12 years.
Or alternately, just view a currency index like the DXY to see very closely that nothing comes close to this.
Here is what some real inflation data looks like (as viewedin terms of CPI). It can't even decide if it wants to stay positive or negative on a monthly basis.
https://tradingeconomics.com/euro-area/inflation-rate-mom