January inflation cools to 2.4%, lowest since May
Consumer prices rose by 0.2% overall in January, according to recent data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Overall, the inflation rose to 2.4% annually in January, a significant cooldown from previous months.
In December and November, inflation rates rose 2.7%, respectively. Those rates were still lower from the 3% inflation rate in September.
The price index for shelter rose 0.2% in January and accounted for the largest factor item in monthly increases. Similarly, the food index rose 0.2%. These increases were offset by a significant decrease in the cost of energy with a 1.5% lower rate.
Over a 12 month period ending in January, the energy index decreased 0.1% and the food index increased 2.9%.
“This is good news on inflation,” said Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal. “There may be one more bump from tariffs, but its encouraging to see a cooling off.”
Gas prices fell by 7.5% over the period of a year ending in January alongside 1.8% lower rate in used cars and trucks. Long praised the slowdown in food price increases and pointed to the rates in January compared to December.
Food prices in December spiked 0.7% overall, whereas January only saw an increase of 0.2%.
“This will help a lot of struggling families,” Long said. “So will the decline in gas prices.”
The inflation report follows a better-than-expected January jobs report that showed an gain of 130,000 jobs and steady unemployment at 4.3%.
Latest News Stories
U.S. debt tops 100% of GDP, ‘deeply troubling’ for economy, national security
Beecher High School Introduces AP Human Geography Course to Tackle Global Issues
U.S. troops in Italy, Spain hang in balance as troop reduction in Germany announced
Federal appeals court halts access to mail-order abortion drug
Labor unions back McCormick’s plan to reform federal permitting
Court-ordered tariff refunds bypass consumers who paid
Beecher Bats Explode in Dominant 16-0 Shutout Over Grant Park
Professor: Surging gas prices will have long-term effects
Illinois Quick Hits: DHS says ICE captures child sex abuser released by Illinois DOC
Wuest Drives in Seven as Beecher Pulls Away to Rout Reed-Custer 16-4
Durbin calls probe ‘sham’; state lawmaker backs transparency
Lawmen believe trip from Carolinas to Washington a threat to Trump