Santa Fe New Mexican

Inflation continued to run hot in June

Prices jump, led by 54% rise in energy from a year ago

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON — Inflation at the wholesale level climbed 11.3 percent in June compared with a year earlier, the latest painful reminder inflation is running hot through the American economy.

The Labor Department reported Thursday that the U.S. producer price index — which measures inflation before it hits consumers — rose at the fastest pace since hitting a record

11.6 percent in March.

Last month’s jump in wholesale inflation was led by energy prices, which soared 54 percent from a year earlier. But even excluding food and energy prices, which can swing wildly from month to month, producer prices in June jumped 8.2 percent from June 2021. On a month-to-month basis, wholesale inflation rose 1.1 percent from May to June, also the biggest jump since March.

Thursday’s report on wholesale prices came a day after the Labor Department reported surging prices for gas, food and rent catapulted consumer inflation to a new four-decade peak in June, further pressuring households and likely sealing the case for another large interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve. Consumer prices soared

9.1 percent compared with a year earlier, the biggest yearly increase since 1981.

Producer prices have surged nearly 18 percent for goods and nearly 8 percent for services compared with June 2021. And the Labor Department said wholesale transporta­tion and warehousin­g prices shot up 23 percent and food prices nearly 13 percent from a year ago.

The persistenc­e of high inflation has eroded incomes, intensifie­d price pressures on companies large and small and raised the risk of an economic downturn as a result of ever-higher borrowing costs. It has also diminished the public’s approval of President Joe Biden and dimmed Democratic prospects in the November congressio­nal elections.

The Fed has embarked on an aggressive series of rate hikes that are intended to tame high inflation without causing a recession.

The U.S. inflation surge erupted from the swift rebound from the 2020 pandemic recession, and it steadily accelerate­d as spending outstrippe­d the availabili­ty of labor and supplies. Generous government aid and super-low rates engineered by the Fed sent consumers on a spending spree that surprised businesses. Factories, ports and freight yards were overwhelme­d, leading to shortages, delays and higher prices.

Some economists have held out hope inflation might be reaching a short-term peak. Gas prices have been falling. Shipping costs and commodity prices have moderated. Pay increases have slowed. And surveys show Americans’ expectatio­ns for inflation over the long run have eased — a trend often points to more moderate price increases ahead.

But this week’s reports showing persistent­ly high consumer and wholesale inflation pressures indicate the Fed will remain under pressure to continue raising rates sharply in the coming months. The strength of the U.S. job market, with robust hiring and unemployme­nt at a near-half-century low, means more people have paychecks to spend, which will keep upward pressure on prices.

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