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Core consumer prices in Chile increased 3.96 percent in June of 2025 over the same month in the previous year. This dataset provides - Chile Core Inflation Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Key information about Chile Core CPI Change
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Core Inflation Rate MoM in Chile decreased to -0.30 percent in June from 0.30 percent in May of 2025. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for Chile Core Inflation Rate MoM.
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Core Consumer Prices in Chile decreased to 106.49 points in June from 106.82 points in May of 2025. This dataset provides - Chile Core Consumer Prices - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Index: OECD Groups: All Items Non-Food Non-Energy: Total for Chile (CPGRLE01CLM657N) from Dec 1998 to Dec 2023 about Chile, core, all items, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, and price.
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Chiles Core-CPI-Änderung belief sich im 2025-02 auf 3.800 %. Dies stellt einen Rückgang im Vergleich zu den vorherigen Zahlen von 4.111 % für 2025-01 dar. Chiles Core-CPI-Änderung werden monatlich aktualisiert, mit einem Durchschnitt von 2.583 % von 2010-01 bis 2025-02, mit 182 Beobachtungen. Die Daten erreichten ein Allzeithoch in Höhe von 10.885 % im 2022-08 und ein Rekordtief in Höhe von -2.201 % im 2010-01. Chiles Core-CPI-Änderung Daten behalten den Aktiv-Status in CEIC und werden von CEIC Data gemeldet. Die Daten werden unter World Trend Pluss Global Economic Monitor – Table: Core CPI: Y-o-Y Growth: Monthly kategorisiert.
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Os dados de Mudança central de CPI do Chile foram registrados em 3.800 % em 2025-02. Este registro de uma queda com relação aos números anteriores de 4.111 % em 2025-01. Os dados de Mudança central de CPI do Chile são atualizados por mês, com uma média de 2.583 % em 2010-01 até 2025-02, com 182 observações. Os dados alcançaram um alto recorde de 10.885 % em 2022-08 e um baixo recorde de -2.201 % em 2010-01. Os dados de Mudança central de CPI do Chile permanecem com status ativo na CEIC e são reportados pela fonte: CEIC Data. Os dados são classificados sob o World Trend Plus’ Global Economic Monitor – Table: Core CPI: Y-o-Y Growth: Monthly.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Index: OECD Groups: All Items Non-Food Non-Energy: Total for Chile (CPGRLE01CLQ657N) from Q1 1999 to Q4 2023 about Chile, core, all items, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, and price.
No description is available. Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/doi%3A10.18739%2FA21Z38 for complete metadata about this dataset.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Indices (CPIs, HICPs), COICOP 1999: Consumer Price Index: All Items Non-Food Non-Energy for Chile (CPGRLE01CLM659N) from Dec 1998 to Dec 2023 about Chile, core, all items, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, and price.
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Graph and download economic data for Consumer Price Indices (CPIs, HICPs), COICOP 1999: Consumer Price Index: All Items Non-Food Non-Energy for Chile (CPGRLE01CLQ659N) from Q1 1999 to Q4 2023 about Chile, core, all items, CPI, inflation, price index, indexes, and price.
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462 Active Global Core I7 buyers list and Global Core I7 importers directory compiled from actual Global import shipments of Core I7.
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Terrigenous sediment supply, marine transport, and depositional processes along tectonically active margins are key to decoding turbidite successions as potential archives of climatic and seismic forcings. Sequence stratigraphic models predict coarse-grained sediment delivery to deep-marine sites mainly during sea-level fall and lowstand. Marine siliciclastic deposition during transgressions and highstands has been attributed to sustained connectivity between terrigenous sources and marine sinks facilitated by narrow shelves. To decipher the controls on Holocene highstand turbidite deposition, we analyzed 12 sediment cores from spatially discrete, coeval turbidite systems along the Chile margin (29° - 40°S) with changing climatic and geomorphic characteristics but uniform changes in sea level. Sediment cores from intraslope basins in north-central Chile (29° - 33°S) offshore a narrow to absent shelf record a shut-off of turbidite deposition during the Holocene due to postglacial aridification. In contrast, core sites in south-central Chile (36° - 40°S) offshore a wide shelf record frequent turbidite deposition during highstand conditions. Two core sites are linked to the Biobío river-canyon system and receive sediment directly from the river mouth. However, intraslope basins are not connected via canyons to fluvial systems but yield even higher turbidite frequencies. High sediment supply combined with a wide shelf and an undercurrent moving sediment toward the shelf edge appear to control Holocene turbidite sedimentation and distribution. Shelf undercurrents may play an important role in lateral sediment transport and supply to the deep sea and need to be accounted for in sediment-mass balances.
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Techical Information: All ages are corrected for 13C and for a reservoir age of 530 years.
Subscribers can find out export and import data of 23 countries by HS code or product’s name. This demo is helpful for market analysis.
Excel file with station names, location and water depth and description of the coring device for NBP0505.
This research was conducted in Chile between May 2010 and April 2011 as part of the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) Enterprise Survey 2010, an initiative of the World Bank. Data from 1033 establishments was analyzed.
The objective of the study is to obtain feedback from enterprises in client countries on the state of the private sector as well as to help in building a panel of enterprise data that will make it possible to track changes in the business environment over time, thus allowing, for example, impact assessments of reforms. Through face-to-face interviews with firms in the manufacturing and services sectors, the survey assesses the constraints to private sector growth and creates statistically significant business environment indicators that are comparable across countries.
The standard Enterprise Survey topics include firm characteristics, gender participation, access to finance, annual sales, costs of inputs/labor, workforce composition, bribery, licensing, infrastructure, trade, crime, competition, capacity utilization, land and permits, taxation, informality, business-government relations, innovation and technology, and performance measures. Over 90% of the questions objectively ascertain characteristics of a country’s business environment. The remaining questions assess the survey respondents’ opinions on what are the obstacles to firm growth and performance.
National
The primary sampling unit of the study is the establishment. An establishment is a physical location where business is carried out and where industrial operations take place or services are provided. A firm may be composed of one or more establishments. For example, a brewery may have several bottling plants and several establishments for distribution. For the purposes of this survey an establishment must make its own financial decisions and have its own financial statements separate from those of the firm. An establishment must also have its own management and control over its payroll.
The whole population, or the universe, covered in the Enterprise Surveys is the non-agricultural economy. It comprises: all manufacturing sectors according to the ISIC Revision 3.1 group classification (group D), construction sector (group F), services sector (groups G and H), and transport, storage, and communications sector (group I). Note that this population definition excludes the following sectors: financial intermediation (group J), real estate and renting activities (group K, except sub-sector 72, IT, which was added to the population under study), and all public or utilities sectors.
Sample survey data [ssd]
The study was conducted using stratified random sampling. Three levels of stratification were used in the sample: firm sector, firm size, and geographic region.
Industry stratification was designed in the way that follows: the universe was stratified into 5 manufacturing industries, 1 service industry -retail -, and 1 residual sector - other services. The four identified manufacturing sectors each had targets of 160 interviews, with other manufacturing having a target of 120 interviews. Both retail and other services had targets of 120 interviews each.
Size stratification was defined following the standardized definition for the Enterprise Surveys: small (5 to 19 employees), medium (20 to 99 employees), and large (more than 99 employees). For stratification purposes, the number of employees was defined on the basis of reported permanent full-time workers. This seems to be an appropriate definition of the labor force since seasonal/casual/part-time employment is not a common practice, except in the sectors of construction and agriculture.
Regional stratification was defined in four locations (city and the surrounding business area): Antofagasta, Los Lagos, Santiago and Valparaíso.
For Chile, two sample frames were used. The first was supplied by the World Bank and consists of enterprises interviewed in Chile 2006. The World Bank required that attempts should be made to re-interview establishments responding to the Chile 2006 survey where they were within the selected geographical locations and met eligibility criteria. That sample is referred to as the Panel. The second sample frame was build using a census of Chilean companies conducted by the Chile National Institute of Statistics (INE) in 2007 for firms in services, and the Annual National Industry Survey 2007, Directory of Chilean companies, for firms in manufacturing.
The quality of the frame was assessed at the onset of the project through visits to a random subset of firms and local contractor knowledge. The sample frame was not immune from the typical problems found in establishment surveys: positive rates of non-eligibility, repetition, non-existent units, etc. In addition, the sample frame contains no telephone/fax numbers so the local contractor had to screen the contacts by visiting them. Due to response rate and ineligibility issues, additional sample had to be extracted by the World Bank in order to obtain enough eligible contacts and meet the sample targets.
Given the impact that non-eligible units included in the sample universe may have on the results, adjustments may be needed when computing the appropriate weights for individual observations. The percentage of confirmed non-eligible units as a proportion of the total number of sampled establishments contacted for the survey was 14.42% (364 out of 2525 establishments).
Complete information regarding the sampling methodology, sample frame, weights, response rates, and implementation can be found in "Description of Chile Implementation" in "Technical documents" folder.
Face-to-face [f2f]
The current survey instruments are available: - Core Questionnaire + Manufacturing Module - Core Questionnaire + Retail Module - Core Questionnaire - Screener Questionnaire
The "Core Questionnaire" is the heart of the Enterprise Survey and contains the survey questions asked of all firms across the world. There are also two other survey instruments - the "Core Questionnaire + Manufacturing Module" and the "Core Questionnaire + Retail Module." The survey is fielded via three instruments in order to not ask questions that are irrelevant to specific types of firms, e.g. a question that relates to production and nonproduction workers should not be asked of a retail firm. In addition to questions that are asked across countries, all surveys are customized and contain country-specific questions. An example of customization would be including tourism-related questions that are asked in certain countries when tourism is an existing or potential sector of economic growth.
The standard Enterprise Survey topics include firm characteristics, gender participation, access to finance, annual sales, costs of inputs/labor, workforce composition, bribery, licensing, infrastructure, trade, crime, competition, capacity utilization, land and permits, taxation, informality, business-government relations, innovation and technology, and performance measures. The questionnaire also assesses the survey respondents' opinions on what are the obstacles to firm growth and performance.
Data entry and quality controls are implemented by the contractor and data is delivered to the World Bank in batches (typically 10%, 50% and 100%). These data deliveries are checked for logical consistency, out of range values, skip patterns, and duplicate entries. Problems are flagged by the World Bank and corrected by the implementing contractor through data checks, callbacks, and revisiting establishments.
The number of realized interviews per contacted establishment was 0.41. This number is the result of two factors: explicit refusals to participate in the survey, as reflected by the rate of rejection (which includes rejections of the screener and the main survey) and the quality of the sample frame, as represented by the presence of ineligible units. The number of rejections per contact was 0.27.
Complete information regarding the sampling methodology, sample frame, weights, response rates, and implementation can be found in "Description of Chile Implementation" in "Technical documents" folder.
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Perubahan CPI Inti Chili dilaporkan sebesar 3.800 % pada 2025-02. Rekor ini turun dibanding sebelumnya yaitu 4.111 % untuk 2025-01. Data Perubahan CPI Inti Chili diperbarui bulanan, dengan rata-rata 2.583 % dari 2010-01 sampai 2025-02, dengan 182 observasi. Data ini mencapai angka tertinggi sebesar 10.885 % pada 2022-08 dan rekor terendah sebesar -2.201 % pada 2010-01. Data Perubahan CPI Inti Chili tetap berstatus aktif di CEIC dan dilaporkan oleh CEIC Data. Data dikategorikan dalam Global Economic Monitor World Trend Plus – Table: Core CPI: Y-o-Y Growth: Monthly.
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This dataset is about: Whole core measurements of magnetic susceptibility on sediment cores GIK17747-2 from the continental slope off Valparaiso, Chile, subtropical southeast Pacific.
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679 Global import shipment records of Core Assembly with prices, volume & current Buyer's suppliers relationships based on actual Global export trade database.
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Core consumer prices in Chile increased 3.96 percent in June of 2025 over the same month in the previous year. This dataset provides - Chile Core Inflation Rate - actual values, historical data, forecast, chart, statistics, economic calendar and news.