Wednesday's Consumer Price Index report is a split progress report on inflation: Underlying price pressures are receding. But August was a bad month for ordinary Americans' cost of living.
Why it matters: Policymakers focus on the core measure of inflation, which offers a less volatile picture of underlying price pressures across the economy.
By the numbers: Headline CPI rose 0.6% in August, the largest increase since June 2022. A sharp jump in gasoline prices (up nearly 11%) was the culprit, alone accounting for more than half of the overall monthly increase.
Yes, but: Excluding energy and food prices, the inflation outlook is encouraging. On a monthly basis, core prices rose 0.3%.
What to watch: There is potential for a spillover effect from the higher energy prices pushing the headline measure into the gauge watched by the Fed.
What they're saying: "Higher energy costs have rippled through to pricing for public transportation and airfares," Jim Baird, chief investment officer of Plante Moran Financial Advisors, wrote in a note. Transportation services rose 2% in August, while airline tickets surged 5% after three months of price declines.
The bottom line: For now, the CPI numbers add to a run of data recently that suggests inflation is receding alongside a cooling labor market. But that is little solace for families struggling to afford everyday items.
Originally published by Neil Irwin and Courtenay Brown at Axios
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