Key inflation gauge hit 6.1% in January, highest since 1982
Source: Associated Press, via Yahoo! Finance
Associated Press
Key inflation gauge hit 6.1% in January, highest since 1982
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
Fri, February 25, 2022, 8:39 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- An inflation gauge that is closely monitored by the Federal Reserve jumped 6.1% in January compared with a year ago, the latest evidence that Americans are enduring sharp price increases that will likely worsen after Russia's invasion of Ukraine. ... The figure reported Friday by the Commerce Department was the largest year-over-year rise since 1982. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, core inflation increased 5.2% in January from a year earlier. ... Robust consumer spending has combined with widespread product and worker shortages to create the highest inflation in four decades -- a heavy burden for U.S. households, especially lower-income families faced with elevated costs for food, fuel and rent.
At the same time, consumers as a whole largely shrugged off the higher prices last month and boosted their spending 2.1% from December to January, Friday's report said, an encouraging sign for the economy and the job market. That was a sharp improvement from December, when spending fell. Americans across the income scale have been receiving pay raises and have amassed more savings than they had before the pandemic struck two years ago. That expanded pool of savings provides fuel for future spending.
Inflation, though, is expected to remain high and perhaps accelerate in the coming months, especially with Russia's invasion likely disrupting oil and gas exports. The costs of other commodities that are produced in Ukraine, such as wheat and aluminum, have also increased.
President Joe Biden said Thursday that he would do "everything I can" to keep gas prices in check. Biden did not spell out details, though he mentioned the possibility of releasing more oil from the nation's strategic reserves. He also warned that oil and gas companies "should not exploit this moment" by raising prices at the pump. ... A separate report Friday showed that orders for long-lasting factory goods rose sharply in January, led by a rise in demand for airplanes. The figures indicate that many companies are willing to invest more in industrial equipment and other goods, a sign of confidence in the economy. (1)
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Read more: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/key-inflation-gauge-hit-6-133927745.html
Year over year, on an annualized basis.
{1} https://www.census.gov/manufacturing/m3/adv/pdf/durgd.pdf
jimfields33
(15,954 posts)Some prices have gone way to high. Boxes continue to shrink as prices rise. Annoying for every American.
The Mouth
(3,164 posts)Inflation got us Reagan instead of Carter's second term.
And outside of a few things that would be odious to all but the most conservative elements of our party, there's not a whole lot President Biden can do about it at the moment.