Current:Home > ContactFederal Reserve’s favored inflation gauge shows price pressures easing as rate cuts near -Thrive Financial Network
Federal Reserve’s favored inflation gauge shows price pressures easing as rate cuts near
View
Date:2025-04-14 05:08:12
WASHINGTON (AP) — An inflation measure closely tracked by the Federal Reserve remained low last month, extending a trend of cooling price increases that clears the way for the Fed to start cutting its key interest rate next month for the first time in 4 1/2 years.
Prices rose just 0.2% from June to July, the Commerce Department said Friday, up a tick from the previous month’s 0.1% increase. Compared with a year earlier, inflation was unchanged at 2.5%. That’s just modestly above the Fed’s 2% target level.
The slowdown in inflation could upend former President Donald Trump’s efforts to saddle Vice President Kamala Harris with blame for rising prices. Still, despite the near-end of high inflation, many Americans remain unhappy with today’s sharply higher average prices for such necessities as gas, food and housing compared with their pre-pandemic levels.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core inflation rose 0.2% from June to July, the same as in the previous month. Measured from a year earlier, core prices increased 2.6%, also unchanged from the previous year. Economists closely watch core prices, which typically provide a better read of future inflation trends.
Friday’s figures underscore that inflation is steadily fading in the United States after three painful years of surging prices hammered many families’ finances. According to the measure reported Friday, inflation peaked at 7.1% in June 2022, the highest in four decades, before steadily dropping.
In a high-profile speech last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell attributed the inflation surge that erupted in 2021 to a “collision” of reduced supply stemming from the pandemic’s disruptions with a jump in demand as consumers ramped up spending, drawing on savings juiced by federal stimulus checks.
With price increases now cooling, Powell also said last week that “the time has come” to begin lowering the Fed’s key interest rate. Economists expect a cut of at least a quarter-point cut in the rate, now at 5.3%, at the Fed’s next meeting Sept. 17-18. With inflation coming under control, Powell indicated that the central bank is now increasingly focused on preventing any worsening of the job market. The unemployment rate has risen for four straight months.
Reductions in the Fed’s benchmark interest rate should, over time, reduce borrowing costs for a range of consumer and business loans, including mortgages, auto loans and credit cards.
“The end of the Fed’s inflation fight is coming into view,” Ben Ayers, senior economist at Nationwide, an insurance and financial services provider, wrote in a research note. “The further cooling of inflation could give the Fed leeway to be more aggressive with rate declines at coming meetings.”
Friday’s report also showed that healthy consumer spending continues to power the U.S. economy. Americans stepped up their spending by a vigorous 0.5% from June to July, up from 0.3% the previous month.
And incomes rose 0.3%, faster than in the previous month. Yet with spending up more than income, consumers’ savings fell, the report said. The savings rate dropped to just 2.9%, the lowest level since the early months of the pandemic.
Ayers said the decline in savings suggests that consumers will have to pull back on spending soon, potentially slowing economic growth in the coming months.
The Fed tends to favor the inflation gauge that the government issued Friday — the personal consumption expenditures price index — over the better-known consumer price index. The PCE index tries to account for changes in how people shop when inflation jumps. It can capture, for example, when consumers switch from pricier national brands to cheaper store brands.
In general, the PCE index tends to show a lower inflation rate than CPI. In part, that’s because rents, which have been high, carry double the weight in the CPI that they do in the index released Friday.
At the same time, the economy is still expanding at a healthy pace. On Thursday, the government revised its estimate of growth in the April-June quarter to an annual rate of 3%, up from 2.8%.
veryGood! (29639)
Related
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Inside Clean Energy: The Racial Inequity in Clean Energy and How to Fight It
- International Yoga Day: Shop 10 Practice Must-Haves for Finding Your Flow
- The First Native American Cabinet Secretary Visits the Land of Her Ancestors and Sees Firsthand the Obstacles to Compromise
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Kesha Shares She Almost Died After Freezing Her Eggs
- A man accused of torturing women is using dating apps to look for victims, police say
- Bryan Cranston Deserves an Emmy for Reenacting Ariana Madix’s Vanderpump Rules Speech
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- A man accused of torturing women is using dating apps to look for victims, police say
Ranking
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Six Takeaways About Tropical Cyclones and Hurricanes From The New IPCC Report
- Tom Brady ends his football playing days, but he's not done with the sport
- Britney Spears Says She Visited With Sister Jamie Lynn Spears After Rocky Relationship
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Hundreds of ready-to-eat foods are recalled over possible listeria contamination
- China Moves to Freeze Production of Climate Super-Pollutants But Lacks a System to Monitor Emissions
- Chris Eubanks, unlikely Wimbledon star, on surreal, whirlwind tournament experience
Recommendation
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Exceptionally rare dinosaur fossils discovered in Maryland
Andy Cohen Has the Best Response to Real Housewives of Ozempic Joke
Moving Water in the Everglades Sends a Cascade of Consequences, Some Anticipated and Some Not
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Microsoft revamps Bing search engine to use artificial intelligence
Inside Clean Energy: The Coal-Country Utility that Wants to Cut Coal
SAG-AFTRA officials recommend strike after contracts expire without new deal