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Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Higher gas and food prices trigger first increase in U.S. consumer inflation in 4 months

The cost of consumer goods and services rose in June for the first time in four months largely because of higher gasoline and food prices, but inflation more broadly remained low and is likely to stay that way during the pandemic.

The consumer price index jumped 0.6% last month to match the biggest increase since 2012, the government said Tuesday. About half of the increase traced to higher gas prices.

Yet even after the latest increase, inflation has risen less than 1% in the past year. By contrast, inflation was running at a 2.5% clip shortly before the pandemic struck.

Another measure of inflation that strips out volatile gas and food prices, known as core CPI, rose a smaller 0.2% in June. It had declined three months in a row for the first time since the government began compiling the number in 1957.

What happened: The cost of gasoline jumped 12.3% after oil prices continued to rebound from a multi-year low. Gasoline is still fairly cheap, however, with prices down more than 23% compared to a year earlier. The pandemic has crippled travel, hurt global trade and kept many drivers off the road.

he cost of food rose again, up a sharp 0.6% in June.

Consumers are paying more for certain products that are in high demand or face sporadic shortages because of viral outbreaks at meat-packing plants or other food-manufacturing sites. People are also eating more at home with indoor dining off limits at most restaurants. That’s also led to higher prices.

As a result, groceries prices have surged during the pandemic. The cost of what the government calls “food at home” has risen at a 5.6% yearly pace — the highest since 2011. The increase in prices tapered off in June, but it remains to be seen if prices continue to recede.

Prices also rose for car insurance, clothing, medical care and shelter. Yet rents only rose 0.1%, marking the smallest increase in nine years. Millions of Americans have lost their jobs and fallen behind on rent and landlords aren’t in a position to raise prices.

The cost of used vehicles, recreation and Internet and phone services all declined.

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