USA: Inflation declines to 4.9%, but core consumer price increases are still high, In April, inflation decreased for the ninth consecutive month as rising petrol prices were offset by sustained reduction in food prices.A measure of underlying inflation that accounts for longer-term trends remained high.
Consumer prices increased 4.9% from a year earlier, down from 5% in March and a 40-year high of 9.1% last June, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. That’s the smallest yearly increase since April 2021. On a monthly basis, prices rose 0.4% following a 0.1% increase in March.
For American shoppers and drivers, Wednesday’s inflation report was mixed. Gasoline prices jumped 3% just in April. By contrast, grocery prices dropped for a second straight month. Used car prices surged 4.4% after nine months of declines. Rental costs rose but at a slower pace.
However, the report showed some indications that inflation is still slowing down. After four consecutive months of price hikes, hotel costs fell 3% in April and airline fares fell 2.6%.
“It’s sticky and bumpy, but make no mistake, inflation is cooling,” said Gregory Daco, Chief Economist at EY-Parthenon.
(USA: Inflation declines to 4.9%, but core consumer price increases are still high)
What is the difference between core CPI and CPI?
Following a 0.4% gain in February, core prices, which don’t include volatile food and energy costs and instead track longer-term trends, grew by 0.4% in March. As a result, the yearly rise was reduced from 5.6% to 5.5%.
The report revealed that the nation’s road back to normal inflation levels will be uneven. Prices overall continued to post a strong increase from the previous month. Although goods inflation has been easing as COVID-related supply chain bottlenecks wind down, some items rose last month. Apparel prices increased and used car prices jumped after nine straight declines.
And while services prices are poised to pick up as Americans resume traveling and dining out more frequently, several of those cost increases slowed in April.
Will the Fed continue to raise rates?
The Federal Reserve this week signalled that it will likely suspend its aggressive campaign that has raised a key interest rate by 5 percent during the previous 14 months, despite the fact that inflation has only slightly decreased since that time. According to Fed experts, the failure of Silicon Valley Bank and two other banks would likely result in tighter lending requirements, a slowdown in the economy, and reduced inflation, which will reduce the central bank’s workload.
Economist Andrew Hunter of Capital Economics says the CPI report keeps the Fed on track to halt its rate hikes but shows that persistently high could prevent Fed officials from cutting rates to combat a weakening economy for a longer period.
(USA: Inflation declines to 4.9%, but core consumer price increases are still high)
What is the future of gas prices?
While gas prices increased in April they are down 12.2% from a year ago. In recent weeks, pump prices have fallen again. Nationally, regular unleaded gasoline averaged $3.53 a gallon Tuesday, down from $3.60 a month ago.
Are grocery prices going to go down?
The price of groceries fell by 0.2%, marking the second consecutive monthly decline, while the annual increase slowed to 7.1% from 8.4%. Due to a slowing in global demand, commodities like wheat and maize have seen a decrease in price recently.
In April, the price of eggs dropped by 1.5%, the third straight monthly decline, after a string of sharp bird flu-related increases but costs are still up 21.4% over the past year. Pork prices fell 1.2%; fish and seafood costs dipped 0.7%; and bread was down 0.3%.
But some costs continued to climb. Chicken prices increased 0.5% and uncooked ground beef, 0.6%.
Restaurant prices increased by 0.4% and are up 8.6% annually.
(USA: Inflation declines to 4.9%, but core consumer price increases are still high)
Is rent causing inflation?
Rent again was the chief driver of inflation but the increase continued to moderate. Rent picked up 0.6%, up from 0.5% in March but down from a string of stronger gains. Annually, the increase was unchanged 8.8%. Economists expect rents to fall, based on new leases, but that shift has been slow to filter through to existing leases.