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Inflation rises for second straight month in August on higher gas costs

Inflation accelerated for a second month in August on a spike in gasoline prices and an underlying measure of household expenses rose more than anticipated, highlighting that the Federal Reserve's battle to tame consumer prices may not be over.

Goods such as used cars and furniture kept drifting down in price, partly offsetting a climb in rent, travel and other services.

Inflation data this week

Consumer prices overall rose 3.7% from a year earlier, up from 3.2% in July, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. That’s the second straight bump after 12 consecutive declines in annual inflation.

On a monthly basis, prices increased 0.6%. That followed a 0.2% rise in July and marked the biggest jump in more than a year. The chief culprit was a surge in gas costs.

What is core inflation?

Core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy items and which the Fed watches more closely, are still elevated and rose 0.3%. Economists expected a repeat of the prior month's 0.2% advance. The rise still moderated the annual increase to 4.3%, down from 4.7% in July and the smallest gain since September 2021.

"The inflation genie is not yet back in the bottle," says Jason Schenker, president of Prestige Economics.

Will inflation go down?

Annual inflation has slowed notably after hitting a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022. But lowering it the rest of the way to the Fed’s 2% target is expected to pose a thornier challenge. While goods prices have fallen as pandemic-related supply chain bottlenecks have dissipated, the cost of services such as car repairs and recreation have leaped, chiefly because of increasing employee wages.

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Will the Fed raise rates again in September?

As a result, Barclays expects the Fed to raise its key interest rate once more this year, by a quarter percentage point, after lifting it by 5.25 points in 16 months. That marks its most aggressive inflation-fighting campaign in four decades.

Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist of Nationwide, says Wednesday's report isn't enough to convince the Fed to veer from its plan to hold rates steady at a meeting next week but it could help persuade officials to hike again in November, depending on how inflation and the job market evolve.

Others say the Fed is done. Forecasters at Pantheon Macroeconomics and Capital Economics believe softer rent increases and a slowing economy and job market in coming months will lead the Fed to stand pat the rest of the year.


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