Consumer prices rise modestly
Courtesy of Tim Iacono at The Mess That Greenspan Made
[Major news outlets are reporting that core inflation has fallen for the first time since 1982, however, there appears to be a problem with the re-weighting of categories within the consumer price index – more on that later.]
The Labor Department reported that consumer prices rose 0.2 percent in January, paced by a surge of 4.9 percent in the cost of energy commodities, and, as the worst of the year-over-year energy price comparisons continue, annual inflation now sits at 2.6 percent.
Core inflation – excluding food and energy – was reported to have declined by 0.1 percent in January, the first monthly decline since 1982, and this was due in large part to a decline of 0.5 percent in the shelter component that contributes about 40 percent to the total.
By category, the report showed the same well established trend of recent months – steadily rising prices for medical care and education with huge year-over-year increases for the energy components within both the housing and transportation categories.
Gasoline prices surged 4.4 percent in January after a gain of 2.3 percent in December and fuel oil costs rose 6.9 percent after an increase of 0.9 percent the month prior.
In the case of housing, energy price gains such as home heating costs were offset by falling shelter costs that reportedly tumbled 0.5 percent in January leading to the overall monthly decline for the housing category as a whole.