Inflation Speeds Up Again in January, Vaulting to Fresh 40-year High

5Mind. The Meme Platform
The Epoch Times Header

Underlying inflationary pressures also rose, pointing to inflation stuck in high gear for longer

Inflation in the United States picked up its pace once again, accelerating to an annual 7.5 percent in January, the highest rate in 40 years and above analysts’ expectations, according to data released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

January’s acceleration in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which reflects inflation from the perspective of end consumers, marks the eighth straight month of prices rising faster than 5 percent year-over-year and a faster pace than December’s 7.0 percent pace.

On a month-over-month basis, the pace of headline CPI inflation held steady at 0.6 percent in January, matching December’s pace and delivering a fresh sign of inflation stuck in high gear.

Consensus forecasts predicted a 7.3 percent rate of annual CPI and a 0.5 percent reading in the monthly measure.

Inflation Risks ‘Tilted to the Upside’

Not only is January’s annual pace of CPI inflation the highest since February 1982, when it hit 7.6 percent, it is also far above the Federal Reserve’s target of 2 percent as reflected in a separate but related inflation gauge, pressuring policymakers to tighten loose monetary settings to knock some of the wind out of surging prices.

“Inflation readings in the U.S. are at their highest levels in nearly 40 years, and nominal wages are accelerating at a faster pace than we have seen in decades,” Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed and a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), said in prepared remarks on Wednesday for a virtual event hosted by the European Economics and Financial Centre.

Noting that inflation risks are “tilted to the upside,” Mester said she backs raising the Fed’s key interest rate in March.

“While the Omicron variant may weigh on activity in the near term, the high levels of inflation and the tightness in labor markets make a compelling case to begin recalibrating the stance of monetary policy,” she said.

Wages have shot up in the United States, adding to fears of a possible wage-price spiral of the sort that bedeviled the U.S. economy in the 1970s. Average hourly earnings of all private-sector employees rose by an annual 5.7 percent in January, which was the highest on record with the exception of a sharp, one-month increase in wages in April 2020. That’s when millions of relatively low-paid workers lost their jobs while their relatively high-paid counterparts remained employed, with the structural shift in employment composition leading to a boost in average wages.

In her speech, Mester touched on the risk of a wage-price spiral, saying that if longer-term inflation expectations become de-anchored, price pressures could stay elevated for even longer.

“Allowing inflation to remain at high levels can lead firms, households, and financial market participants to expect higher inflation over the longer term. A rise in longer-term inflation expectations could then spill over into wage- and price-setting dynamics, leading to even more persistent inflation,” she said.

By Tom Ozimek

Read Full Article on TheEpochTimes.com

Contact Your Elected Officials
The Epoch Times
The Epoch Timeshttps://www.theepochtimes.com/
Tired of biased news? The Epoch Times is truthful, factual news that other media outlets don't report. No spin. No agenda. Just honest journalism like it used to be.

Congress fumbles college sports

College sports landscape is a dumpster fire and every sports reporter, broadcaster and fan believes Congress needs to stay out of it.

The Hating Game

The Democrat Party game show should be titled "The Hating Game", played by pitting one class, race, or identity against another for political power.

The Invasion Of The Ballot Snatchers

As election results loom, California faces ballot controversies in a real-life political drama that raises concerns about election integrity.

The politics of perception

Shapiro relies on big-money fundraising, while Garrity’s campaign emphasizes local support and fiscal discipline.

The Coming Tsunami of AI Entertainment

If AI replaces creativity, critical thinking, imagination, discipline, and effort, it could be the greatest enabler of human decline.

Investigation Reveals 1 in 4 Popular Grocery Items Contains Excessive Additives

Analysis of 40 popular food products found 25% contained additives exceeding established safety consumption thresholds.

Hegseth Visits Guantanamo Bay Amid Rising Tensions With Cuba

Sec. of War Pete Hegseth on June 10 is visiting U.S. forces in Cuba and at the headquarters of the U.S. CENTCOM in Florida amid tensions in mission areas.

Trump Signs $70 Billion Bill to Fund ICE, Border Patrol for 3 Years

President Donald Trump on June 10 signed a $72 billion bill on June 10 to fund Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Border Patrol.

Studies Cited by RFK Jr., Others Involved in Vaccine Changes Face Blowback

Journals retracted or removed two papers, and are investigating at least two others, based in part on complaints from self-identified vaccine advocates.

Trump Says US ‘Not Looking to Renew’ Trade Deal With Canada, Mexico Ahead of July Review

President Trump is considering not renewing the North American free trade deal, citing U.S. being better off without goods produced by Canada and Mexico.

DOJ Says It Will Comply With Court’s Block on ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’

The Justice Department has hit pause on a proposed anti-weaponization fund after an unfavorable court ruling.

Trump Suggests Vance’s Anti-Fraud Efforts Could Save Social Security

The president made the comment at a Cabinet meeting...

Trump’s Triumphal Arch Approved by Federal Commission

A commission has approved President Donald Trump’s triumphal arch just outside of Washington, a key step toward making the project a reality.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central