Miami Herald (Sunday)

Fed banking on interest rate hikes to keep inflation from inflating as much as past year

- BY TOM HUDSON

You may think Inflation is like the weather: Everyone complains, but can’t do anything about it.

Except the Federal Reserve doesn’t believe that. And investors continue to show confidence in the central bank’s willingnes­s to take on generation­al high inflation while a war is waged in Eastern Europe.

The bankers and investors will get the latest evidence this week why the Fed will raise its target short-term interest rate in mid-March. The monthly Consumer Price Index surged 7.5% in January. Removing food and energy price hikes, inflation still was up 6% — three times higher than the Federal Reserve’s longrun goal.

Inflation did not cool much last month. A year ago, price hikes were contained. Twelve months later, the cork is off, and February’s data will mark a full year of inflation growing at more than the Fed’s 2% target.

Beyond the eye-catching headline number — what is inflating inflation?

The price changes of all products are not equal when computing inflation. The CPI is a weighted index. In the nomenclatu­re of government statistici­ans, shelter prices are more influentia­l than the price of anything else, and more influentia­l than the prices of almost everything else combined. It’s important to note the CPI doesn’t capture home prices, but the cost of “renting” a place to live. The shelter portion of the CPI is running hot — 4%. That’s well below the overall number, but is important because it accounts for a third of the index.

Still, it doesn’t account for the super-hot inflation. Household goods are about 20% of the overall number. Stuff like curtains, furniture, tools, and clothes are considerab­ly more expensive than a year ago. So are groceries and, of course, gasoline.

The Fed interest rate hikes that will begin later this month won’t have much effect on those last two items. That leaves a tighter space for the Fed to attempt to let the air out of inflation.

Tom Hudson hosts ‘The Sunshine Economy’ on WLRN-FM, where he is the vice president of news. Twitter: @HudsonsVie­w

 ?? NAM Y. HUH AP file, 2021 ?? AAA reports that the national average price for a gallon of gas was $3.84 as of Friday, up from $2.75 one year ago.
NAM Y. HUH AP file, 2021 AAA reports that the national average price for a gallon of gas was $3.84 as of Friday, up from $2.75 one year ago.
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