US inflation slows in April after seven months of gains

Consumer prices jumped 8.3 percent last month from 12 months earlier, the US Department of Labor said Wednesday.

A customer pumps gas at an Exxon gas station
In the United States, the price of a gallon of regular gas or petrol has reached a record $4.40 ($1.16 per litre), according to the American Automobile Association, though that figure isn’t adjusted for inflation [File: Marta Lavandier/AP Photo]

Inflation in the United States slowed in April after seven months of relentless gains, a tentative sign that price increases may be peaking while still imposing a financial strain on American households.

Consumer prices jumped 8.3 percent last month from 12 months earlier, the US Department of Labor said Wednesday. That was below the 8.5 percent year-over-year surge in March, which was the highest rate since 1981.

On a month-to-month basis, prices rose 0.3 percent from March to April, a still-elevated rate but the smallest increase in eight months. Consumer prices had spiked 1.2 percent from February to March, mostly because of a sudden jump in petrol or gas prices triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Nationally, the price of a gallon of regular petrol has reached a record $4.40, according to the American Automobile Association, though that figure – amounting to $1.16 per litre – isn’t adjusted for inflation. The high price of oil is the main factor. US benchmark crude sold for around $100 a barrel Tuesday. Petrol had fallen to about $4.10 a gallon in April, after reaching $4.32 in March.

Beyond the financial strain for households, inflation is posing a serious political problem for President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats in the midterm election season, with Republicans arguing that Biden’s $1.9 trillion financial support package last March overheated the economy by flooding it with stimulus cheques, enhanced unemployment aid and child tax credit payments.

On Tuesday, Biden sought to take the initiative and declared inflation “the number-one problem facing families today” and “my top domestic priority”.

Biden blamed chronic supply chain snarls related to the swift economic rebound from the coronavirus pandemic, as well as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, for igniting inflation. He said his administration will help ease price increases by shrinking the government’s budget deficit and by fostering competition in industries, like meatpacking, that are dominated by a few industry giants.

Still, new disruptions overseas or other unforeseen problems could always send US inflation back up to new highs. If the European Union decides, for example, to cut off Russian oil, gas prices in the US would likely accelerate. China’s COVID-19 lockdowns are worsening supply problems and hurting growth in the world’s second-biggest economy.

Previous signs that US inflation might be peaking didn’t last. Price increases decelerated last August and September, suggesting at the time that higher inflation might be temporary, as many economists — and officials at the US Federal Reserve — had suggested. But prices shot up again in October, prompting Fed Chair Jerome Powell to start shifting policy towards higher rates.

This time, though, several factors are pointing to an inflation peak. Natural gas prices, which soared in March after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, fell on average in April and likely slowed inflation. Used car prices are also expected to have dropped last month. Automakers’ supply chains have unravelled a bit, and new car sales have risen.

While food and energy have endured some the worst price spikes of the past year, analysts often monitor the core figure to get a sense of underlying inflation. Core inflation also typically rises more slowly than the overall price increases and can take longer to decline. Rents, for example, are rising at a historically fast pace, and there is little sign of that trend reversing anytime soon.

The unexpected persistence of high inflation has caused the Fed to embark on what may become its fastest series of interest rate increases in 33 years. Last week, the Fed raised its benchmark short-term rate by a half point, its steepest increase in two decades. And Powell signalled that more such sharp rate hikes are coming.

The Fed under Powell is seeking to pull off the notoriously difficult — and risky — task of cooling the economy enough to slow inflation without causing a recession. Economists say such an outcome is possible but unlikely with inflation this high.

In the meantime, by some measures Americans’ wages are rising at the fastest pace in 20 years. Their higher pay enables more people to at least partly keep up with higher prices. But employers typically respond by charging customers more to cover their higher labour costs, which, in turn, heightens inflationary pressures.

Last Friday’s jobs report for April included data on hourly pay that suggested that wage gains were slowing, which, if it continues, could help ease inflation this year.

Source: AP