US Inflation Spreads To Core Prices
August 14th, 2008Posted in Distribution Phase, Economic Data, Economic News, General News, Interest rates, Retirement News, Senior Expenses, Social Issues, retirement investments |
WASHINGTON — U.S. inflation soared to a 17-year-high annual rate in July, a government report showed, led by gains in food, energy, airline fares and apparel.
With energy and commodity prices on the retreat this month and the U.S. dollar strengthening, the report is unlikely to spook Federal Reserve policymakers into raising rates anytime soon as the economy struggles with rising unemployment and soft consumer spending.
Still, a surprising rise in core inflation that excludes food and energy last month will keep officials on edge about the possibility that food and energy prices will become more firmly entrenched in the economy.
The consumer price index rose 0.8% in July, the Labor Department said Thursday. That came on the heels of June’s 1.1% rise, which was the second largest June 1982.
Excluding food and energy, the CPI advanced 0.3% for a second-straight month.
Wall Street economists had expected only a 0.4% rise in the headline and 0.2% core increase, according to a Dow Jones Newswires survey.
Unrounded, the CPI rose 0.818% last month. The core CPI advanced 0.327% unrounded.
Consumer prices jumped 5.6% on a year-over-year basis, the highest rate since January 1991. The core CPI grew a more modest 2.5% compared to July 2007, though that’s still well above the Fed’s long-term goal of 1.5% to 2%. Over the past three months, core inflation rose at a 3.5% annual rate.
Though Fed officials said in a policy statement last week that inflation remains a “significant” concern, they are likely to look past the July data. The Fed is generally expected to keep official interest rates steady into next year, though the rise in core inflation, if repeated in coming months, could put rate hikes later this year back into play.
Many of the forces boosting prices in recent months — particularly high energy and commodity prices and the weaker U.S. dollar — have reversed since mid-July.
In a Dow Jones Newswires interview Wednesday, Minneapolis Fed President Gary Stern said even though the U.S. is “probably…in for a few more sizable increases” in overall prices measures, “assuming we don’t get a resurgence of energy prices, we will see over time a diminution of headline inflation, for sure.”
“As that occurs, I think we’ll also see some diminution of the core,” said Stern, who is considered one of the most vigilant inflation fighters on the Fed.
Energy prices swelled 4% last month, according to Thursday’s report. Gasoline prices spiked 4.1%, and natural gas prices rose 7.4%. Food and beverage prices rose 0.9%.
Medical care prices, meanwhile, increased a modest 0.1%.
But other core items posted sharp gains, a sign that higher headline inflation may have started seeping through the rest of the economy.
Clothing prices, for instance, rose 1.2% compared to June, a 10-year high. Transportation prices soared 1.7% on the month as airline fares swelled 1.3%, reflecting the rise in fuel prices. New vehicle prices advanced a modest 0.2%, reflecting falling demand.
Housing, which accounts for 40% of the CPI index, was up 0.6%. Rent increased 0.3%. Owners’ equivalent rent advanced 0.1%. However lodging away from home rose 0.7%, while home fuel and utilities posted sharp gains.
Services prices rose 0.5%.
In a separate report, the Labor Department said the average weekly earnings of U.S. workers, adjusted for inflation, fell 0.8% in July, suggesting incomes aren’t keeping pace with prices.
That, in turn, could further damp consumer spending which appeared weak in July, according to a retail sales report released Wednesday.
-By Brian Blackstone; Dow Jones Newswires;


