US inflation likely cooled again last month in latest sign of a healthy
economy
Send a link to a friend
[October 10, 2024] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. inflation last month likely reached its lowest
point since February 2021, clearing the way for another Federal Reserve
rate cut and adding to the stream of encouraging economic data that has
emerged in the final weeks of the presidential campaign.
The consumer price index is expected to have risen just 2.3% in
September from 12 months earlier, down from the 2.5% year-over-year
increase in August, according to economists surveyed by FactSet, a data
provider. A reading that low, likely reflecting lower gas prices and
only a slight rise in food costs, would barely exceed the Fed's 2%
inflation target. A little over two years ago, inflation had reached a
peak of 9.1%.
Measured month over month, consumer prices are thought to have risen a
scant 0.1% from August to September, down from a 0.2% increase the
previous month.
The improving inflation data follows a mostly healthy jobs report
released last week, which showed that hiring accelerated in September
and that the unemployment rate dropped from 4.2% to 4.1%. The government
has also reported that the economy expanded at a solid 3% annual rate in
the April-June quarter. And growth likely continued at roughly that pace
in the just-completed July-September quarter.
Cooling inflation, steady hiring and solid growth could erode former
President Donald Trump's advantage on the economy in the presidential
campaign as measured by public opinion polls. In some surveys, Vice
President Kamala Harris has pulled even with Trump on the issue of who
would best handle the economy, after Trump had decisively led President
Joe Biden on the issue.
At the same time, most voters still give the economy relatively poor
marks, mostly because of the cumulative rise in prices over the past
three years.
For the Fed, last week's much-stronger-than-expected jobs report fueled
some concern that the economy might not be cooling enough to slow
inflation sufficiently. The central bank reduced its key rate by an
outsized half-point last month, its first rate cut of any size in four
years. The Fed's policymakers also signaled that they envisioned two
additional quarter-point rate cuts in November and December.
In remarks this week, a slew of Fed officials have said they're still
willing to keep cutting their key rate, but at a deliberate pace, a sign
any further half-point cuts are unlikely.
[to top of second column] |
A shopper considers large-screen televisions on display in a Costco
warehouse Oct. 3, 2024, in Timnath, Colo. (AP Phogto/David
Zalubowski, File)
The Fed “should not rush to reduce”
its benchmark rate “but rather should proceed gradually,” Lorie
Logan president of the Federal Reserve's Dallas branch, said in a
speech Wednesday.
Inflation in the United States and many countries in Europe and
Latin America surged in the economic recovery from the pandemic, as
COVID closed factories and clogged supply chains. Russia's invasion
of Ukraine worsened energy and food shortages, pushing inflation
higher. It peaked at 9.1% in the U.S. in June 2022.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, so-called core prices
likely rose 0.3% from August to September, according to FactSet, and
are probably 3.2% above their level a year earlier. Though such a
figure would be faster than is consistent with the Fed's 2% target,
economists expect core inflation to cool a bit by year's end as
rental and housing prices grow more slowly.
Economists at Goldman Sachs, for example, project that core
inflation will drop to 3% by December 2024. Few analysts expect
inflation to surge again unless conflicts in the Middle East worsen
dramatically.
Though higher prices have soured many Americans on the economy,
wages and incomes are now rising faster than costs and should make
it easier for households to adapt. Last month, the Census Bureau
reported that inflation-adjusted median household incomes — the
level at which half of households are above and half below — rose 4%
in 2023, enough to return incomes back to their pre-pandemic peak.
In response to higher food prices, many consumers have shifted their
spending from name brands to private labels or have started shopping
more at discount stores. Those changes have put more pressure on
packaged foods companies, for example, to slow their price hikes.
This week, PepsiCo reported that its sales volumes fell after it
imposed steep price increases on its drinks and snacks.
“The consumer is reassessing patterns,” Ramon Laguarta, CEO of
PepsiCo, said Tuesday.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |