The Mercury News

Inflation cools slightly, but worrying details remain

It continues at pace more than 3 times as fast as was typical before the pandemic

- By Jeanna Smialek

WASHINGTON >> Inflation has slowed from its painful 2022 peak but remains uncomforta­bly rapid, data released Tuesday showed, and the forces pushing prices higher are proving stubborn in ways that could make it difficult to wrestle cost increases back to the Federal Reserve's goal.

The consumer price index climbed 6.4% in January compared with a year earlier, faster than economists had forecast and only a slight slowdown from 6.5% in December. While the annual pace of increase has cooled from a peak of 9.1% in summer 2022, it remains more than three times as fast as was typical before the pandemic.

And prices continued to increase rapidly on a monthly basis as a broad array of goods and services, including apparel, groceries, hotel rooms and rent, became more expensive. That was true even after stripping out volatile food and fuel costs.

Taken as a whole, the data underlined that while the Federal Reserve has been receiving positive news that inflation is no longer accelerati­ng relentless­ly, it could be a long and bumpy road back to the 2% annual price gains that used to be normal. Prices for everyday purchases are still climbing at a pace that risks chipping away at economic security for many households.

“We're certainly down from the peak of inflation pressures last year, but we're lingering at an elevated rate,” said Laura RosnerWarb­urton, senior economist at MacroPolic­y Perspectiv­es. “The road back to 2% is going to take some time.”

Stock prices sank in the hours after the report, and market expectatio­ns that the Fed will raise interest rates above 5% in the coming months increased slightly. Central bankers have already lifted borrowing costs from near-zero a year ago to above 4.5%, a rapid-fire adjustment meant to slow consumer and business demand in a bid to wrestle price increases under control.

But the economy has so far held up in the face of the central bank's campaign to slow it down. Growth did cool last year, with the ratesensit­ive housing market pulling back and demand for big purchases like cars waning, but the job market has remained strong, and wages are still climbing robustly.

That could help to keep the economy chugging along into 2023. Consumptio­n overall had shown signs of slow

ing meaningful­ly, but it may be poised for a comeback: Economists expect retail sales data scheduled for release Wednesday to show that spending climbed 2% in January after falling 1.1% in December, based on estimates in a Bloomberg survey.

Signs of continued economic momentum could combine with incoming price data to convince the Fed that it needs to do more to bring inflation fully under control, which could entail pushing rates higher than they had expected or leaving them elevated for longer. Central bankers have been warning that the process of wrangling cost increases might prove bumpy and difficult.

“There has been an expectatio­n that it will go away quickly and painlessly — and I don't think that's at all guaranteed,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said at an event last week. “The base case for me is that it will take some time, and we'll have to do more rate increases, and then we'll have to look around and see whether we've done enough.”

A broad range of products and services kept inflation elevated in January: Pricier hotels, car insurance and vehicle repairs all contribute­d to the increase in the overall index.

Some goods, including used cars and clothing for women, dropped in price on a monthly basis. Even so, the slowdown for some physical products was less pronounced than it had been. Price increases for overall apparel accelerate­d, for instance.

Moderating price increases for goods and commoditie­s have driven the overall inflation slowdown in recent months. Fed officials have embraced the cooldown but have also warned that it may not continue, because it has come as pandemic disruption­s faded and tangled supply chains unsnarled.

“Supply chains can't recover twice,” Lorie Logan, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, said in a speech Tuesday.

Service prices may prove to be more closely tied to underlying momentum in the economy: Labor is a major cost for many service companies, so businesses are likely to charge more when unemployme­nt is low and they have to increase pay to compete for workers.

So far, such inflation shows little sign of letting up. Service prices excluding energy continued to increase rapidly in January, owing in part to the jump in rental and other housing costs.*

 ?? PHOTOS BY CASEY STEFFENS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Monthly growth in food prices accelerate­d slightly in January, reversing a gradual decline seen in recent months, as the price of eggs, cookies and citrus fruits all rose.
PHOTOS BY CASEY STEFFENS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Monthly growth in food prices accelerate­d slightly in January, reversing a gradual decline seen in recent months, as the price of eggs, cookies and citrus fruits all rose.
 ?? ?? Services inflation, which includes restaurant meals and other non-physical purchases, remains unusually rapid.
Services inflation, which includes restaurant meals and other non-physical purchases, remains unusually rapid.

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