Consumer Prices Rise 2.4% From Year Earlier

Consumer
Daniel Acker/Bloomberg

WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer prices rose 2.4% in March from a year earlier, the fastest annual pace in 12 months.

The Labor Department said April 11 that on a monthly basis, the consumer price index declined 0.1% in March. The index’s yearly gain, however, suggests that inflation pressures may be picking up.

Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices ticked up 0.2% in March and 2.1% from a year ago. That was the biggest annual increase for core prices since February 2017.

The gains partly reflect the impact of changes in mobile phone services costs, which fell sharply last March after several carriers introduced unlimited data plans. That drop has lifted year-over-year price changes, boosting the annual gains.



Still, economists said there were signs elsewhere of rising prices. Hotel prices jumped 2.3% in March, while rents increased 0.3%. Hospital services costs rose 4.9%.

“U.S. inflation is warming up rather than heating up,” BMO Capital Markets Economist Sal Guatieri said.

The Federal Reserve wants inflation to generally run at about 2%, as a hedge against deflation, when prices and wages fall. For most of the past six years, consumer prices have been stuck below that level, according to a separate gauge the Fed monitors.

The consumer price index has averaged just 1.6% in the past decade.

The Fed has lifted the short-term rates it controls six times since December 2015, with the latest increase occurring last month. The Fed’s benchmark rate stands at 1.5% to 1.75%, still low historically.

Fed policymakers have signaled they intend to raise rates twice more this year. If inflation data continue to show signs of picking up, they could hike rates three times.

“The upward trend could suffice to nudge the Fed three more times this year,” Guatieri said.

Other items fell in price. The cost of clothing, used cars and gasoline dropped in March, with prices at the pump down 4.9%, the most since last May.