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PCE Index Shows Stability - Here’s Why That’s a Dangerous Myth

Fed’s PCE Report: The Soothing Numbers That Should Scare You

The latest Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index. This data underscores the Fed PCE inflation deception, released by the Commerce Department, reveals the following:

  • Headline PCE Inflation rose 0.2% in November, marking a 2.8% annual increaseabove the 2.7% expected.
  • Core PCE Inflation (excluding food and energy) also increased 0.2%, holding steady at 2.8% year-over-year.
  • Goods prices rose 1.4%, barely moving since September.
  • Durable goods (big-ticket items like appliances and cars) saw a 1.2% increase, up from 1% in October.
  • Services inflation is alarmingly high: 3.4% year-over-year.
  • Personal savings rate dropped to 3.5%, the lowest in three years.
  • Consumer spending is rising despite stagnating income, fueled by gains in stock market wealth—not wage growth.

On paper, it sounds manageable. In reality, it's a trap.  Showing inflation rose 0.2% in November and remains elevated at 2.8% year-over-year—well above the Federal Reserve’s stated 2% target. See how “cooling” prices are framed as progress even as households face persistent cost pressures and eroding purchasing power.

This Isn’t Stabilization—It’s Controlled Demolition

The Fed wants Americans to believe inflation is "cooling" because it’s no longer spiking. But 2.8% inflation isn't a victory—it's a slow bleed. And when paired with flat incomes and declining savings, it signals something far worse: economic fatigue masked by delusion.

They’re not beating inflation. They’re rebranding it.

Every month that inflation stays above the Fed’s 2% target, your dollar loses more power—quietly, consistently. And when the services sector, which includes rent, healthcare, and education, runs hot at 3.4%, that hits families hardest. These aren’t optional expenses. They’re survival costs.

The Fed’s Favorite Index Is Rigged by Design

The PCE index is the Fed’s go-to inflation gauge—not because it’s more accurate, but because it’s more politically convenient.

  • It underweights essentials like food and energy, which are the most volatile and painful for households.
  • It gives more weight to wealthier households’ spending habits, further masking middle-class erosion.
  • It’s smoother and slower-moving, meaning the pain takes longer to show up—but lasts longer when it does.

That’s why officials like PCE over the CPI. It tells the story they want: “Things are fine. No need to panic.”

But here’s the truth: CPI has been running hotter. Food, rent, and transportation costs are choking families. Yet none of that urgency is captured in the Fed’s sanitized data stream.

Wages Stagnant, Savings Collapsing—Yet Spending Rises?

Michael Pearce from Oxford Economics laid it out clearly, perhaps unintentionally: incomes are flat, yet spending is up. How?

“The boost from rising stock market wealth is playing a key role supporting spending of high-income households.”

Translation: the top 10% are spending more because their asset portfolios are exploding in value. Meanwhile, everyone else is draining their savings or racking up debt to tread water.

  • Savings rate fell to 3.5%, down from 5.5% in April.
  • Job market softness means wages aren’t keeping up.
  • Consumers are living off borrowed time and borrowed money.

This divergence—a rich class growing richer while the rest scramble—is being smoothed over by “average” data. But averages lie. They blend prosperity and poverty into a single digestible statistic.

Recession in Disguise: The Illusion of Strong GDP

The government also released Q3 GDP data showing “the fastest pace in two years.” But let’s take a closer look:

  • Growth was fueled by consumer spending, not production.
  • That spending? Fueled by asset inflation and credit, not wage increases or new jobs.
  • Disposable income? Stagnant.

It’s a sugar high—short-lived, unsustainable. When the debt ceiling hits, the job market tightens, or the market corrects, this façade will collapse.

We’ve Seen This Movie Before—And It Doesn’t End Well

Remember 2006? The housing bubble, inflated by cheap credit and speculative wealth, kept consumer spending afloat. Savings dwindled. Debt soared. And the Fed—just like now—declared it all under control.

We know how that ended.

Today, we’re walking the same path:

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  • Artificially suppressed interest rates.

  • Asset bubbles inflating the illusion of wealth.

  • Real wages stagnating while costs rise.

  • A widening wealth gap that’s systemically ignored.

This is 2008 in slow motion. Only this time, the bailouts are pre-loaded, and the Fed has already burned most of its tools.

What Happens When the Music Stops?

If inflation remains sticky and savings vanish, we’ll see:

  • A wave of consumer defaults.

  • Massive credit contraction.

  • Demand destruction that leads to recession.
  • A Fed with no firepower, already boxed in between rate hikes and economic fragility.

And if the Fed does pivot to rate cuts in 2026, it’ll be out of desperation, not strength—because they’ll be forced to prop up a system already wheezing from internal decay.

The Final Theft: Inflation as a Policy Tool

Let’s call this what it is: inflation theft.

This is not market failure. This is planned erosion of the dollar to inflate away government debt, reprice labor, and mask systemic insolvency. It’s a policy choice—executed by a central bank more loyal to capital markets than to the citizens it’s supposed to serve.

The elites profit from asset inflation. The government loves debt devaluation. And you? You’re footing the bill through higher prices, smaller paychecks, and evaporating savings.

Conclusion: The Fed Isn’t Fighting Inflation—They’re Weaponizing It

This PCE report isn’t neutral data—it’s propaganda dressed in decimal points. A fog of half-truths designed to pacify public outrage while your purchasing power is quietly extracted.

The Fed won’t save you. Wall Street won’t warn you. And the government sure as hell won’t admit what’s happening.

So pay attention.

Because what they call "elevated inflation" is really the slow annihilation of the American middle class—one paycheck, one grocery bill, one savings account at a time

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