 V tem paperu, ki Sam, Channing, in ja, imam skupanje, je o pristim dinamijku in kako je to prišlo in zelo. Pristim dinamijku. Tako, zelo smo prišli, da je nekaj nekaj, nekaj nekaj nekaj nekaj nekaj nekaj nekaj pristim dinamijku. In, especially tze prispravne danamike in tze prispravne danamike deprejnja na sej stavljenji stavljenja. In tato stavljenje je pravno neko svojo, da seje in z CPI, ker CPI je jezitojno izjavljenja in andrej angusti in taz. In je znači, da sej stavljenje stavljenje ...of rich people and usually urban households. So if we have that poor people consume basic food more, and at the same time we have the price of basic food goes up much more than other products' prices, then we might have consequences on inequality measures and also on the preparedness of growth. So we know that that's precisely what happened in the 2007-2009 crisis when basically basic food prices went up together with fuel prices and this is at an international level. This is maize and rice and fuel and other basic products went up a lot. And the crisis also hit many developing countries, especially those that are food importers. So we take Mozambique as a case study because Mozambique is a food importer and experience domestically this upsurging the price of basic food. We can see from this figure that starting from 2007, price of wheat, price of maize and price of rice went up a lot in Mozambique. Now, we decided then to understand better how these price dynamics affected inequality and inequality measures. So we divided all consumed products into three categories, mainly, well, namely, known food, basic food and known basic food, let's say, we call them core food, which is most important food, accounting for like 75% of consumption and known core food. We can see here, which were the price dynamics of these categories. The blue line is the national CPI, the red line is known food. The purple line is instead known core food, and the green line is core food. We can see that between 2007 and 2009 core food prices went up much more than known food and known core food prices. And especially if we look at the national CPI, we can see that this does not represent very well this upsurge. So, we decided to build, to see whether different percentiles, different income percentiles experienced different inflation rates. And that's precisely what we found, that lower and middle income percentiles groups, they experienced a rate of inflation around 190, but the richest percentiles in Mozambique experienced a much lower inflation rates, especially the richest ones. So, we created the deflator, which incorporates household-specific information, the household-specific expenditure structure.