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Consumer prices rose 4.2% annually in May, according to the consumer price index. That inflation rate, a three-year-high, is driven largely by the ongoing war in the Middle East. Energy prices are up nearly 24% since last year.
All of this is very bad news for who the CPI is all about: consumers.
“Consumer pockets have limited ability to stretch,” said Yelena Shulyatyeva, a senior U.S. economist at The Conference Board.
There’s a risk that what’s happening with energy prices could shape consumers' inflation expectations, said Christiane Baumeister, a macroeconomist at the University of Notre Dame.
“They have been seen once again, month after month, since the outbreak of the war, prices rising, right? And they might just start expecting further and further increases, and that means inflation expectations might become unanchored,” she said.
That’s a risk for the Federal Reserve. And even though core inflation — which strips out food and energy — is still below 3%, Baumeister suspects that measure could move up.
“The inflation process is a staggered process,” she said. “Some companies might have taken a wait and see approach before passing costs on to consumers, but I think that that might still happen.” |