Good one.
My housing is the same, since I didn't refinance my mortgage.
Property taxes are the same.
Transportation is down from a couple of years ago when gas prices spiked, but not too sure about the year over year on this one.
Groceries are broadly the same; wine, which is what I pay the most attention to (hey, if you drink it every night with dinner, it's a grocery) is the same.
Citrus is up, I think there's some crop yield problems there.
Firewood went up to $200 a cord, but I think someone was figuring on cashing in on oil and gas shooting up, because that wood is still sitting in a big pile.
Books, which we consume a lot of around here, are still cheap as always: we buy 'em used every year when the local library has a big sale, and we got a Nook which we can use for getting everything else pretty cheap. I got Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments for a buck on that thing. I bought City, a sci-fi one on shortie's referral, from Amazon cheap and used.
Energy is about the same, partly because we replace the incandescents with CFL's every time one burns out, and that has actually reduced our electric bill noticeably, which offsets a rise in our winter heating bill. We also replaced all our desktop computers with laptops, and they use a lot less power too.
The Boy's tuition goes up 3% every year like clockwork. If ever there was a case of extortion, this is it; these guys know they have you by the short and curlies, and they just pull a little harder every year. Come the revolution, we shoot the professors first; the lawyers can wait.
So, overall, I'd say around +2%, just because tuition is such a huge part of our budget right now.