HomeNewsOpinionDisinflation is happening in all the right places

Disinflation is happening in all the right places

The US consumer price index is still a fog of lags, imputations and general noise, but the categories that matter are extremely encouraging

June 13, 2024 / 11:35 IST
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Disinflation
The breadth of the ongoing inflation is getting much narrower.

There’s still a lot of noise in the latest US inflation report, but the things that matter are moving in the right direction.

The core consumer price index — which excludes volatile food and energy prices — rose just 0.2% in May from the previous month, the softest month-on-month inflation since August 2021 and less than the 0.3% projected by the median economist in a Bloomberg survey (unrounded, the May number came to 0.1631%). The so-called supercore services index — which excludes the lagged shelter category — saw prices fall slightly from the previous month, the first time that’s occurred in nearly three years.

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It was just one month in a notoriously volatile data set, of course, but it adds to evidence from April that the hot first quarter was an aberration in a longer disinflation process. Core CPI rose 3.4% from a year earlier, a major improvement for an index that peaked at 6.6% in 2022 — but still a long ways from the Federal Reserve’s 2% target (which is technically based on another measure of inflation, PCE).

Under the hood, there were plenty of encouraging signals for Fed policymakers to chew on, and Chair Jerome Powell seemed to receive the news with his signature cautious optimism at the press conference that followed Wednesday’s central bank meeting. Predictably, he and his colleagues kept rates steady at 5.25%-5.5%, yet he characterized the data as “a better inflation report than almost anybody expected.”