The Mercury News

Consumer prices jump 0.6% in March

- By Martin Crutsinger

>> U.S. consumer prices increased a sharp 0.6% in March, the biggest uptick since 2012, while inflation over the past year jumped 2.6%. The big gains had been anticipate­d and are largely expected to be a temporary blip rather than a reawakenin­g of long dormant inflation.

The increase in the Labor Department’s consumer price index

Tuesday followed a 0.4% increase in February and was the biggest onemonth gain since a 0.6% bump in August 2012.

The year-over-year increase was far greater than the 1.7% increase for the 12-month change the previous month and while it easily exceeded the Federal Reserve’s 2% target for inflation, the 2.6% increase in March was more of a snapshot of a period of time last year when prices tumbled as much of the world went into a pandemic lockdown.

The Fed a year ago slashed its key interest rate to near zero and has signaled that it does not plan to start increasing interest rates until it sees a sustained rise in inflation above its 2% target. Currently, the expectatio­n is that the Fed’s first rate hikes will not occur until after 2023.

To ward off turbulence in financial markets over fears of rising interest rates, Fed Chairman Jerome

Powell has for weeks cautioned that inflation figures will rise this spring, but that the increase would be temporary.

Economists call the March jump a base effect

due to those plunging prices at the start of the pandemic. The phenomenon can make inflation appear worse than it is at first glance.

For example, the 2.6% March jump looks out of whack compared with core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy. That was up a more moderate 1.6% over

the past 12 months, compared to a 1.3% 12-month increase in February.

For March, energy prices increased a sharp 5% led by a 9.1% jump in gasoline prices. The gasoline surge accounted for nearly half of the monthly price gain. AAA reports that the nationwide average for gasoline stands at $2.86 a gallon,

up from $1.86 a year ago.

Food prices edges up 0.1% in March and are 3.5% higher than a year ago.

Economists said they expected further price gains in coming months as the country continues to open up, but believe the Fed will continue to see those gains as temporary.

“The surge in inflation

in March is the first meaningful wave of several that will cumulative­ly lift inflation in the coming months to a level not seen in many years,” said Jim Baird, chief investment officer for Plante Moran Financial Advisors. “Even so, the coming surge shouldn’t be a cause for alarm.”

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