businessconservative
Inflation: Why Your Groceries and Gas Cost More
Thursday, February 13, 2025
Hannon said that many customers are already asking about price increases and when the tariffs are coming. He started seeing a noticeable pickup of customers ordering products like washing machines this month to get ahead of the tariffs. Separately, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday in testimony before the House Financial Services Committee that the Fed “has made great progress” on inflation “but we’re not quite there yet. ” “Today’s inflation print . . . says the same thing, ” he added. As a result, the Fed wants to keep rates “restrictive for now, ” he said. At its current level, the Fed’s key rate is restricting borrowing and spending by consumers and businesses, Powell has said.
With inflation down significantly from its 9. 1% peak in June 2022, the Fed cut its rate to about 4. 3% in its final three meetings last year. It raised its benchmark rate in 2022 and 2023 to a two-decade high of 5. 3% to combat inflation. The Fed’s rate typically influences other borrowing costs for everything from mortgages to credit cards. Early Wednesday, Trump said on social media that interest rates should be lowered, “something which would go hand in hand with upcoming Tariffs! ! ! ” Yet the tick up in consumer prices makes it less likely the Fed will cut rates anytime soon.
One sign of concern for economists is that goods prices, excluding food and energy, rose 0. 3% in January from the previous month. Prices for cars, furniture, and appliances had been flat or falling after supply-chain kinks stemming from the pandemic were resolved. Yet now those prices have ticked up even before tariffs have been launched. Trump has imposed 25% tariffs on steel and aluminum, which could push the cost of cars, appliances, and industrial machinery higher. He also said earlier this week he would impose “reciprocal tariffs” on countries that have high duties on U. S. goods.
“There’s just a stew of uncertainty that if it lasts and lingers over the next couple months, you could see business confidence come down, ” Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise, said. That could reduce hiring and investment, he said. On Tuesday, Powell acknowledged that higher tariffs could lift inflation and limit the central bank’s ability to cut rates, calling it “a possible outcome. ” But he emphasized that it would depend on how many imports are hit with tariffs and for how long. “In some cases it doesn’t reach the consumer much, and in some cases it does, ” Powell said. “And it really does depend on facts that we we haven’t seen yet. ”
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