5 signs inflation will soon be finished

It wrecked family budgets and drove President Biden’s approval rating underwater. But inflation, which peaked two years ago at 9%, is finally running out of steam.

The inflation rate dropped to 3% in June, from 3.3% the month before. From May to June, overall price levels dropped, the first month-to-month decline since 2020. There are still isolated hotspots, but inflation seems definitively headed toward the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

Many consumers rightly point out that while the pace of price increases might be slowing, steep price hikes of the last two years are still there. Well, guess what: There’s actually deflation in some parts of the economy, and that’s likely to continue. Here are five things that should cheer consumers, even if the inflation battle isn’t quite over.

Goods are now dropping in value

Americans spend money in two broad categories, goods and services, and goods are returning to normal price levels. Overall, the price level for goods is now slightly lower than it was last year, with furniture down 4.6% year over year, appliances down 3.6%, and electronics down 1.6%.

Food prices are still rising, by a modest 2.2%. But that’s down sharply from the 11% food inflation of 2022. And retailers say they’re cutting some food prices as consumers cut back, which is the way supply and demand is supposed to work when prices get too high. Food prices will not fall all the way back to 2021 levels, but they will realign with incomes and what shoppers are willing to spend.

Cantaloupe pieces are displayed for sale at a supermarket in New York on Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023. In 2023, hundreds of people in the U.S. and Canada have been sickened in a growing outbreak of salmonella poisoning linked to contaminated whole and pre-cut cantaloupe. (AP Photo/Mary Conlon)
Grocery prices are seeing better days. (AP Photo/Mary Conlon) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Rent inflation is finally improving

The annual inflation rate for rent is 5.1%, still fairly high. But that’s down from a peak of 8.8% last year, and economists think rents will continue to moderate and in some cases decline. The government’s gauge of rent inflation is weird because it doesn’t count new leases, and therefore doesn’t reflect real-world savings renters accrue when they sign a new 12-month lease for less than the last one. Other data shows that rents on new leases have dropped during the last year, and that is slowly filtering into official data.

“One thing that stood in this report was the moderation in rent,” Bank of America economists wrote on July 11 after the latest inflation data came out. They point out that rent trends have strong inertia, meaning that price declines tend to stick once they set in. “The bottom line is that inflation data are headed in the right direction,” the analysts concluded.

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Cars are finally getting cheaper

New vehicle prices have fallen five months in a row and are down 0.9% from a year ago. Used car prices have been falling too, and they’re down 10.1% from a year ago. Car prices are still well above pre-COVID levels, but this is one category where prices could fall sharply if buyers dry up and dealers get stuck with too much inventory.