News

Wholesale Inflation In US Further Slowed In November To 7.4%

Rising prices are still straining Americans' finances, particularly for food, rent and services such as haircuts, medical care and restaurant meals

US Inflation
info_icon

Wholesale prices in the United States rose 7.4 per cent in November from a year earlier, a fifth straight slowdown and a hopeful sign that inflation pressures across the economy are continuing to cool.
     
The latest year-over-year figure was down from 8 per cent in October and from a recent peak of 11.7 per cent in March. On a monthly basis, the government said Friday that its producer price index, which measures costs before they reach consumers, rose 0.3 per cent from October to November for the third straight month.
     
Rising prices are still straining Americans' finances, particularly for food, rent and services such as haircuts, medical care and restaurant meals. Yet several emerging trends have combined to slow inflation from the four-decade peak it reached during the summer.
     
Gas prices have tumbled after topping out at USD 5 a gallon in June. Nationally, they averaged USD 3.33 a gallon Thursday, according to AAA, just below their average a year ago.
     
And the supply chain snarls that caused chronic transportation delays and shortages of many goods, from patio furniture to curtains, are unravelling. US ports have cleared the backlog of ships that earlier this year took weeks to unload. And the cost of shipping a cargo container from Asia has fallen sharply back to pre-pandemic levels.
     
As a result, the prices of long-lasting goods, from used cars and furniture to appliances and certain electronics, are easing.
     
Friday's producer price data captures inflation at an early stage of production and can often signal where consumer prices are headed. Next week, the government will report its highest-profile inflation figure, the consumer price index.
     
The most recent CPI report, for October, showed a moderation in inflation, with prices up 7.7 per cent from a year earlier. Though still high, that was the lowest year-over-year figure since January.
     
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, in a speech last week, pointed to the decline in goods prices as an encouraging sign. Powell suggested that housing costs, including rent, which has been a major driver of inflation, should also start to slow next year.
     
The Fed chair also signalled that the central bank will likely raise its benchmark interest rate by a smaller increment when it meets next week. Investors foresee a half-point Fed hike, after four straight three-quarter-point increases.
     
Yet Powell noted that services prices, which reflect the largest sector of the US economy, are still increasing at a historically fast pace. Rapidly rising wages are a key driver of services inflation, he noted. That's because as wages rise, many businesses pass on their higher labour costs to their customers through higher prices, which drives up inflation.
     
Pay is still rising quickly and could continue to fuel higher inflation through most of next year. In last week's jobs report for November, the government reported that average hourly pay jumped 5.1 per cent from a year earlier, far above the pre-pandemic pace. Powell said wage gains closer to 3.5 per cent would be needed to bring inflation down toward the Fed's 2 per cent annual target. 
 

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement