U.S. consumer prices rose slowly in August, held down by weak energy prices that masked a broader firming in price pressures.
The
consumer-price index, which measures what Americans pay for items from
fresh whole milk to lawn-care services, rose a seasonally adjusted 0.1%
in August from a month earlier, matching economists’ expectations.
The sluggish pace of overall price growth largely reflected a
decline in energy prices. Core consumer prices, which exclude the
volatile categories of food and energy, increased 0.3% from the previous
month. This marked the third straight monthly rise of 0.3% and a pickup
from earlier in 2019.
Prices for a wide array of goods and
services rose last month. Rent and medical prices were among the drivers
behind stronger inflation in August.
From a year earlier, consumer prices increased 1.7% in August and
core consumer prices climbed 2.4%, the fastest annual pace since July
2018 when core prices also rose 2.4%.
Strengthening inflation
helps reassure Federal Reserve policy makers, who have frequently
expressed concern this year about weak inflation.
The Fed
targets 2% inflation as measured by the
personal-consumption-expenditures price index, a separate gauge that
includes many components of the consumer-price index. The PCE price
index has been running below the central bank’s target and rose 1.6% in
July from a year earlier.
Policy makers see low inflation as a
threat because it tends to weigh on interest rates, giving them less
room to stimulate the economy in a downturn by reducing borrowing costs.
A separate report showed real average hourly earnings, a
measure of inflation-adjusted earnings, increased 0.4% in August from a
month earlier.
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