Inflation increases slightly in April

  • Los Angeles Times
  • Friday, May 22, 2015 3:06pm
  • Business

WASHINGTON – Inflation increased slightly in April as energy prices remained low and costs for groceries, clothing and airfares declined, the Labor Department said Friday.

The consumer price index rose 0.1 percent, in line with economists’ forecasts, boosted by a big jump in medical costs.

It was the third straight monthly increase for the index after three months of declining prices, indicating that inflation is stabilizing.

But April’s figure was down from the 0.2 percent increases recorded in the previous two months.

And for the year ended April 30, consumer prices declined 0.2 percent. The decrease was driven by a steep drop in energy prices, which fell 19.4 percent in the same period.

The year-over-year deflation – lower than the 0.1 percent annual decline through March 31 – makes it less likely that Federal Reserve policymakers will hike a key short-term interest rate at their next meeting in June.

But so-called core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, increased 0.3 percent in April, the largest rise since January 2013. The figure was up from 0.2 percent the previous month.

For the year ended April 30, core inflation was 1.8 percent.

Oil and gas prices have started increasing recently, so inflation should pick up in the coming months, which would set the stage for an interest rate hike later this year.

Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Union Bank in New York, said inflation “if not rearing it’s ugly head,” has shown that it is back, which increases the likelihood that the Fed will raise interest rates soon.

Still, energy prices were down 1.3 percent in April, including a 1.7 percent decrease in gas prices. Fuel oil costs fell by 8.4 percent.

Grocery prices dropped 0.2 percent, although that was offset by a 0.2 percent rise in restaurant prices to leave overall food costs unchanged in April.

Medical costs rose 0.7 percent, the biggest jump since January 2007, boosted by a 1.9 percent increase in hospital services.

Fed policymakers have said they need to see inflation increasing toward the central bank’s 2 percent annual target before they will hike the so-called federal funds rate, which has been near zero percent since late 2008.

The Fed uses a different inflation barometer based on personal consumption expenditures. That measure has been running higher than the consumer price index but still was up just 0.3 percent for the year ended March 30, the latest data available.

In minutes released Wednesday from the Fed’s April meeting, policymakers “generally anticipated that inflation would rise gradually” toward the 2 percent target this year as the labor market continued to improve and the temporary effects of low oil prices dissipated.

Fed officials are watching economic data closely and have indicated that a hike in the federal funds rate could come as early as June.

But minutes from the April meeting said that “many participants … thought it unlikely that the data available in June would provide sufficient confirmation that the conditions for raising the target range for the federal funds rate had been satisfied, although they generally did not rule out this possibility.”

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