Miami Herald

Inflation surges again in June, raising risks for economy

- BY CHRISTOPHE­R RUGABER

U.S. inflation surged to a new four-decade high in June because of rising prices for gas, food and rent, squeezing household budgets and pressuring the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates aggressive­ly — trends that raise the risk of a recession.

The government’s consumer price index soared 9.1% over the past year, the biggest yearly increase since 1981, with nearly half of the increase due to higher energy costs.

Lower-income and Black and Hispanic Americans have been hit especially hard because a disproport­ionate share of their income goes toward essentials such as transporta­tion, housing and food. But with the cost of many goods and services rising faster than average incomes, a vast majority of Americans are feeling the pinch in their daily routines.

For 72-year-old Marcia Freeman, who is retired and lives off of a pension, there is no escape from rising expenses.

“Everything goes up, including cheaper items like store brands,” said Freeman, who visited a food bank near Atlanta this week to rein in her grocery costs. Grocery prices have jumped 12% in the past year, the steepest climb since 1979.

Accelerati­ng inflation is a vexing problem for the Federal Reserve, too. The Fed is already engaged in the fastest series of interest-rate hikes in three decades, hoping to cool inflation by tamping down borrowing and spending by consumers and businesses.

The U.S. economy shrank in the first three months of the year, and many analysts believe the trend continued in the second quarter.

“The Fed’s rate hikes are doing what they are supposed to do, which is kill off demand,” said Megan Greene, global chief economist at the Kroll Institute. “The trick is if they kill off too much and we get a recession.”

The central bank is expected to raise its key short-term rate this month by a hefty three-quarters of a point as it did last month.

As consumers’ confidence in the economy declines, so have President Joe Biden’s approval ratings, posing a major political threat to Democrats in the November congressio­nal elections. Forty percent of adults said in a June AP-NORC poll that they thought tackling inflation should be a top government priority this year, up from just 14% who said so in December.

After years of low prices, a swift rebound from the 2020 pandemic recession and supply-chain snags ignited inflation.

Consumers unleashed a wave of pent-up spending, spurred by vast federal aid, ultra-low borrowing costs and savings that they had built up while hunkering down. Russia’s war against Ukraine further magnified energy and food prices.

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