Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Almighty Buck United States

Inflation Sits at 8.2% as Core Prices Hit Four-Decade High (wsj.com) 273

U.S. consumer inflation excluding energy and food accelerated to a new four-decade high in September as prices continued to surge, a sign that persistent cost increases are becoming entrenched in the economy. From a report: The Labor Department on Thursday said that the so-called core measure of the consumer price index -- which excludes volatile energy and food prices -- gained 6.6% in September from a year earlier [PDF], up from 6.3% in August. That marked the biggest increase since August 1982. On a monthly basis, the core CPI rose 0.6% in September, the same as in August, and up from 0.3% in July. Investors and policy makers follow core inflation closely as a reflection of broad, underlying inflation and as a predictor of future inflation.

The overall CPI increased 8.2% in September from the same month a year ago, down from 8.3% in August. That was also lower than annual increases of 8.5% in July and 9.1% in June, which was the highest inflation rate in four decades. The CPI measures what consumers pay for goods and services. The retreat of overall inflation from the June high came as gasoline prices cooled. But prices for housing, medical care, food and other items have continued to increase, threatening to keep inflation higher for longer. Housing costs rose by the most since the early 1980s, as a strong labor market continues to push up rental rates. Housing makes up the largest share of the overall and core indexes. Prices for used cars and apparel cooled in September, offering limited relief to consumers from high inflation.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Inflation Sits at 8.2% as Core Prices Hit Four-Decade High

Comments Filter:
  • Well yes (Score:4, Informative)

    by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:28AM (#62962961) Journal
    When companies are deliberately raising their prices to have record profits [npr.org], hoping the real inflation will cover up their increases [businessinsider.com], this should be expected.
    • Re:Well yes (Score:4, Insightful)

      by CrimsonAvenger ( 580665 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:36AM (#62963019)

      When the President decides to add 11% to the money supply, it's pretty much given that we're going to net AT LEAST 11% inflation.

      And most of the things they do to "stop inflation" either makes it worse or does nothing at all.

      Myself, I'm expecting about 25% - 45% inflation of the dollar by the time it settles down again.

      Note that "it settles down" does NOT mean "no inflation" - it just means "not much inflation (say, 2% per year or less).

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by whitroth ( 9367 )

        Yeah... and CEO bonuses, salaries, and corporate profits are massively up, and that's not anything a President has any control over.

        Now, if Congress were to pass windfall profits taxes, and price controls, then you can open your mouth. Till then, shove it.

      • Re:Well yes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:53AM (#62963149) Journal

        > When the President decides to add 11% to the money supply, it's pretty much given that we're going to net AT LEAST 11% inflation.

        No, it isn't. At any given point an economy produces $x in value in the form of goods and services. The money supply, therefore, needs to be ~$x or else you will have inflation or deflation. Both are bad, for different people and for different reasons. It is not "pretty much given" that any inflation would occur at all.

        Also, the President has literally nothing to do with it. They may try to put pressure on the Federal Reserve to do something, but ultimately the White House has no authority to dictate monetary policy. None.
        =Smidge=

        • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

          Government deficits financed by printed money ARE money creation and, indeed, inflationary.

          • Re:Well yes (Score:5, Informative)

            by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @12:19PM (#62963237) Journal

            Good thing, then, that the US doesn't actually do that. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell is openly hostile to the idea of simply printing money to finance debts. Instead the US rolls over the debt into new bonds as the old bonds come due. While arguably unwise, there is no inflationary pressure from that practice.

            Maybe we could pay some of that debt by taxing people and corporations instead?
            =Smidge=

            • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

              Yeah that's why the Fed has 8 trillion on their balance sheet, because they haven't been printing money. Oh wait.

        • We also now have the data that shows that the change in the money supply didn't cause demand-side inflation: consumer spending is back on trend after the temporary shock, and the specific areas that have inflated the most have obvious supply constraints.

          A lot of the recession fetishists are playing games by conflating annualized inflation and year-over-year inflation. The areas that inflated sharply did so many months ago and have already softened. But they want more rate hikes now despite that fact that if

      • Re:Well yes (Score:4, Insightful)

        by TomGreenhaw ( 929233 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:57AM (#62963177)
        Additionally, when the president:

        starts a number of trade wars,
        enacts a bunch of tariffs,
        negotiates a 2 year deal in 2022 with Saudi Arabia to cut back production on oil,
        has a huge unfunded tax cut,
        mishandles pandemic prevention and response,
        backs out of nuclear agreement with Iran thereby blocking their oil from being sold on the open market,
        signs bills for a ton of corporate welfare spending,
        increases the federal deficit more than any other president in modern history,
        blocks migrant workers from picking crops
        politicizes the fed and demands near zero prime lending rates in a hot economy

        be prepared for inflation that will take time to kick in and years to get under control.

        Don't get me wrong, I don't favor either party, but we need to be honest about our problems if they are to be solved.
        • The inflation indicators started go red in 2021. The the president label it as "transitory" and failed to act in order to push his spending bill through. He failed to recognize the end of pandemic and the rapid economic recovery that followed. And here we are now scrambling to cool runaway economy after the meltdown already started. Everything that was done was done reactively - total failure of leadership. Now they are refusing to acknowledge that the economy is in recession while the inflation is still o
      • Re:Well yes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by LeeLynx ( 6219816 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @12:06PM (#62963207)
        I guess the 33+% added during the last year of the Trump administration [tradingeconomics.com] is unrelated - that was the good kind of addition to the money supply. Biden's is the bad kind.
        • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @05:14PM (#62964475)
          I'm actually less concerned about increases to the money supply than I am about where that increased supply goes.

          If the majority of it goes to everyday working Americans they spend it, create a bunch of economic activity and therefore more new businesses, goods and services which keeps inflation low.

          But that's not what we did. We gave nearly all of it to the top .1%. The used it to go on a spending spree buying up companies, houses and apartment buildings. Once they owned enough market share to constrain competition they jacked up prices, driving inflation through the roof.

          And the worst thing is we didn't just let them do it, we helped them do it.
      • Re:Well yes (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Inglix the Mad ( 576601 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @12:14PM (#62963223)

        When the President decides to add 11% to the money supply, it's pretty much given that we're going to net AT LEAST 11% inflation.

        So adding trillions to the money supply via tax cuts is totes different? F**k that man. You're repeating stupidity. Inflation happens when we start reorienting economy. It can be widespread or isolated. Usually it's a mix.

        And most of the things they do to "stop inflation" either makes it worse or does nothing at all.

        Depends on your point of view. The Fed's favorite thing is putting people on unemployment.

        Myself, I'm expecting about 25% - 45% inflation of the dollar by the time it settles down again.

        Note that "it settles down" does NOT mean "no inflation" - it just means "not much inflation (say, 2% per year or less).

        Oh wait you're serious let me laugh even harder.

        For nearly 50 years we've had artificially enforced wage stagnation for most of America "keeping prices low" but creating a growing problem. When you decouple wages from productivity for that long, it's going to create one f**k of a mess unwinding it all.

        In the early 1970's a regular 'ol TV reporter in LA could be married to a stay-at-home wife and the have a couple kids. Oh and he could afford to buy a new Bonanza airplane. Fast forward 50 years and that TV reporter would have to be a multi-millionaire to do the same thing. Why? Stagnant real wages creating an ever shrinking market. Not just for planes, but look at larger (non-commercial) fishing or sail boats. I've got friends who wouldn't own a big boat today, except they bought one in the late 1970's before prices went haywire.

        Now the pandemic did something funny, it f**ked with the system a bit. Them durty peons got a bit of power. They got wage increases because companies were desperate for workers. Even today many companies have trouble finding enough employees... and that's after the Fed has been raising interest rates to try and cause a spike in unemployment. Companies obviously have a lot of excess money if rate increases aren't affecting them that much yet. They might be making targeted cuts that get headlines, but like many of my clients one set of people being let go is at the same time more people in a different area are being hired.

        On top of that, it started shifting money around in a different pattern. People weren't going on cruises or international trips, they were buying / updating housing. They were buying cars / trucks / RV's. TONS of money suddenly shifted direction. When you do that, you get a shiatload of inflation. More if you get companies like JBS (to name but one) who openly spike prices to raise profits. Not like they care about the paltry fine, cost of doing business. Not that it helped the ranchers... that "inflation" went straight to JBS bottom line while ranchers went out of business.

        So keep drinking the kool-aid man, but this is all laughable. Talk to me after we cut CEO pay back down and make up for 50 years of not increasing pay with productivity.

      • Milton Friedman had it right in the 70's.
        Only the government creates inflation by mass spending, only the government can stop it by not spending.

        He couldn't get the US Government to listen then and now they conveniently forgot he existed.
        Funny enough the Germans listened and got it right in the 60's.

    • by splutty ( 43475 )

      Don't come into this discussion with your socialist commie ideas. Pure capitalism baby!

    • When companies are deliberately raising their prices to have record profits [npr.org], hoping the real inflation will cover up their increases [businessinsider.com], this should be expected.

      NPR is merely interviewing someone from a left wing activist group. She's cherry picking one example and trying to falsely extrapolate that on a large scale. She's literally just echoing the White House talking points, she virtually admits this with her reference to the President's comments.

      All politics, no actual analysis.

      • by whitroth ( 9367 )

        Bullshit. This says that you haven't even looked at the business section of google news. There's no cherry picking needed.

        Or did you miss where the Saudi oil company recorded a 90% INCREASE IN PROFITS?

        • Or did you miss where the Saudi oil company recorded a 90% INCREASE IN PROFITS?

          Are you claiming that there haven't been any changes in the global energy markets to cause that increase? I vaguely recall something about a war, and some sanctions...

          • by caseih ( 160668 )

            Yeah I used to believe in the idea of a global market too. This thing kind of shows what a sham the global markets really are. Why should Putin's war have any effect on Saudi Arabia's production or their buyers who are not under sanction and not affected by the conflict? Similarly, why does the war drive up domestic prices for oil and gas largely produced domestically?

            It's profiteering. That's what's driving inflation right now, not demand outstripping supply capabilities. Companies have taken advantage

        • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

          by drnb ( 2434720 )

          This says that you haven't even looked at the business section of google news.

          I looked at and commented on the NPR article. All politics, no actual analysis.

          Or did you miss where the Saudi oil company recorded a 90% INCREASE IN PROFITS?

          Thanks, now we have two cherry picked examples. Well, almost. As a Saudi company they are not US, hence their exposure to US inflation is limited.

    • we changed the rules so that companies could merge and buy as much as they want as long as they pinky sweared they wouldn't raise consumer prices.

      Biden finally changed back to the old rules that consider market share and actual effects on competition but without anti-trust enforcement to break up modern day "bells" that's just closing the barn door after the horses ran off.

      And Biden does not think he has the political capital to go trust busting. He's probably right too.

      But hey, let's just keep
    • This is CYA to a monstrous mistake. They have to keep pounding this to save from disaster at the elections.

      It's like a bank truck crashing, and people runn around grabbing dollars, then complaining about it.

      Production will produce more...eventually, as greed makes them seek more sales, not just costlier ones.

      But everyone saw this coming. We are people of science. When the additional $6 trillion was coming, everyone predicted it would cause inflation, except those who wanted to spend.

      Right on schedule, as

  • Sure, their 'volatile',
    but how can you really exclude those?
    Our 3 largest increases in our household.
    Food - up at least 25%
    Electricity up at least 20%
    Gas - Up 100% since Biden entered office.
    I guess everything else is up 6.6%, but the three above account for the vast majority of our monthly expenses. It would probably make Our inflation easily over 20%

    • Sure, their 'volatile',

      What about MY volatile, that's what I want to know.

      Note that the word you were looking for and failed to find is "they're", not "there" or "their"...

    • Let's talk instead about the things that everybody uses, that the poor cannot do without buying. Yes, I think it's obscene that a Jeep SUV MSRP is now in the 90 kilodollar ballpark, but people can buy used cars when new are too expensive. Here are some real world price differences from the previous and current administration:

      • Gasoline: $2.65 to 3.49 per gallon.
      • Eggs - from 99 cents to $2.45 per dozen
      • Bacon - $5.49 to $7.98 per pound.

      And these are just the products for which I've been paying attention.

    • Sure, their 'volatile', but how can you really exclude those? Our 3 largest increases in our household.
      Food - up at least 25%
      Electricity up at least 20%
      Gas - Up 100% since Biden entered office.
      I guess everything else is up 6.6%, but the three above account for the vast majority of our monthly expenses. It would probably make Our inflation easily over 20%

      Interesting that everything looks like year over year except your gas prices.

      I'm in Utah which has higher inflation than the national average.
      Food: up 30%
      Eating out: up 40%
      Electricity: up 15%
      Gasoline: up 15%

      In May. 2020, gasoline in Utah averaged $1.98 / gallon (as low as $1.47 in Salt Lake County). Today gasoline averages $4.19 statewide ($4.26 in Salt Lake County). That's 112% inflation in 29 months statewide (185% inflation in Salt Lake County). This is down from a record high of $5.26 back in July.

      • May 2020 is a fucking stupid time to compare the present to, since fewer people were driving due to COVID. Gas prices are also highly seasonal. What you want is pre-COVID data from the same month to compare to.

        http://www.utahgasprices.com/R... [utahgasprices.com]

        Looks like Oct 2019 was about $2.80. So this is a 50% rise, which isn't great, but it's also not over 100%. Then again, fuel SHOULD be more expensive. Every family doesn't need a stinkbarge SUV that does 15-20 mpg ... even without electric cars, the technology for

    • Because they want to look at the effects of the money supply, not the effects of other thing that affect the energy and food prices. It isn't about how the average person suffers, it's about how much they need to adjust the money supply.

    • Sure, their 'volatile', but how can you really exclude those? Our 3 largest increases in our household.
      Food - up at least 25%
      Electricity up at least 20%
      Gas - Up 100% since Biden entered office.
      I guess everything else is up 6.6%, but the three above account for the vast majority of our monthly expenses. It would probably make Our inflation easily over 20%

      Let me try again with more relevant numbers.

      Biden took office in Jan 2021. The closest gas price I can find is for Feb 2021. National average gas price was $2.50. Current national average is $3.84. That's 54% inflation since Biden took office - nowhere near the 100% you mention. A better comparison would be year-to-year. Oct 2021 saw national average of $3.25; that gives 18% inflation.

  • Uh no (Score:4, Funny)

    by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:39AM (#62963037) Homepage Journal

    Housing costs rose by the most since the early 1980s, as a strong labor market continues to push up rental rates. Housing makes up the largest share of the overall and core indexes.

    The rental rates are being pushed up more by a reduction in demand than an increase in supply. The rise in investment properties and airbnb (and similar services) coupled with rising permit fees making it difficult to cost effectively build homes has sharply decreased the available housing. The labor market is already contracting in response to the fed's rate increase, and it wasn't nearly as healthy as described previously in any case — jobs that don't pay a living wage only delay homelessness, they don't prevent it.

    • by whitroth ( 9367 )

      Bullshit. Rental prices are going up massively because the biggest owner of rental property are hedge funds.

    • "The rental rates are being pushed up more by a reduction in demand than an increase in supply."?

      You seem to have the law of supply and demand bass ackwards!

    • by MeNeXT ( 200840 )

      The rental rates are being pushed up more by a reduction in demand than an increase in supply.

      Rental prices get pushed up due to an increase in demand and/or a decrease in supply. The demand for housing has increased while the supply is being restricted. The problem will get worse since everyone is looking for someone to blame even when they themselves are the problem.

  • You have too much money! If you can afford to not beg for a job in our wage slave factory, we have to make sure your money ain't worth shit so you come to papa.

  • by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @11:52AM (#62963139)

    Gee, the Fed is increasing interest rates to tame inflation, which increases mortgage costs by a factor of 10-15%, and we find that inflation is up!

    Oh, and Congress also passes a huge stimulus plan to pump money into the economy, and that somehow helps maintain strong consumer spending and employment?!!

    When will the clown show end? 6 years is far too long.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @02:21PM (#62963843) Journal

      > and Congress also passes a huge stimulus plan to pump money into the economy,

      Do you mean the infrastructure bills? Most projects haven't started yet. It takes a while to draw up and vet plans. But they are necessary as to fix rickety pipes and bridges that have been neglected for too long, and get us less dependent on oil and the dictators who control most of it.

      Pipes don't care about the economy when they prepare to snap.

      If you have an easy fix without notable side-effects, let's hear it! Spew forth your grand wisdom so humanity can be improved. I'm all ears...

  • by istartedi ( 132515 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @12:22PM (#62963247) Journal

    It seems like the over-the-top QE during the pandemic blew quite a bubble, but it also seems like the Russo-Ukraine war is keeping oil prices high.

    I was expecting all that QE to drive inflation eventually, but maybe not this much. Now the Fed is using monetary policy to quell inflation that has a mixture of monetary and supply related causes, along with many other Covid related distortions such as the unusual demand for lumber that was driven by home improvement projects.

    So much "what goes up must come down", but more than one ball in the air.

  • We had 13.5% inflation in 1980, and we lived through it by working harder. I don't want to hear you pussies whining about the 8.2% inflation! Sure, gas is $6/gallon... why haven't you bought an electric vehicle yet? They are as low as $26K now... much cheaper than those jacked up penis compensator trucks!
    • To work hard would require having a job where you actually work.. Desk jobs are not work but they seem to be getting all the raises, leaving the true workers that make the world go round with even less value. Anyone can push buttons at a computer, but it takes physical exertion to actually work.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @01:07PM (#62963469)

    Even if you believe the CPI numbers are not manipulated (which they are [shadowstats.com]), there is a clear factor which lowered the CPI over the last few months...

    A key factor in the CPI is energy cost, but over the last several months the U.S. has been dumping the strategic oil reserve around 1 million barrels a day.

    So that means energy costs have been lower over the last few months (as we can all see with gas prices) but they are due to stop dumping the oil reserves shortly after the midterms.

    So over the next several months oil prices will continue to ramp up and up, greatly affecting CPI going forward for a while as well. Over 8% is the new normal and it will probably crest 9% again before too long.

    • I guess the 'strategy' in this case was to avoid a complete blowout in the midterms. Same with student loan forgiveness which will die in the courts.
  • by TigerPlish ( 174064 ) on Thursday October 13, 2022 @02:24PM (#62963877)

    All this thread -- and others like it -- do is show how utterly brainwashed, indoctrinated, deluded and intolerant so many Americans, Britons and Europeans have become.

    Convinced of the correctness of their "thinking" (indoctrination, really), a lot of people are are inching the Western world closer to ruin than ever before. All because people are not thinking, they're merely parroting what they hear and read every day.

    I'm done. I'll do my speaking in the ballot box, for what little that's worth. If you lot want to push the world into a Communist / Marxist future where everyone's equally miserable, that's on you. Some tried to warn you, but you won't listen, you won't think.

    Think. I mean really think, critically. Stop voting with your feelings. Do it critically, coldly, clinically. Be more Spock than Kirk. Stop blindly believing every word out of the internet, the TV and the pulpit and think about the long-term consequences of your political alignments and actions.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

Working...