A clearance sign is displayed at a retail clothing store in Downers Grove, Ill., Tuesday, March 12, 2024. On Friday, March 29, 2024, the government issues its latest monthly report on the Federal Reserveโs preferred inflation gauge, a key measure of how well the Fedโs drive to tame inflation is succeeding. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
A measure of inflation that is closely tracked by the Federal Reserve slipped last month in a sign that price pressures continue to ease.
The government reported Friday that prices rose 0.3% from January to February, decelerating from a 0.4% increase the previous month in a potentially encouraging trend for President Joe Bidenโs re-election bid. Compared with 12 months earlier, though, prices rose 2.5% in February, up slightly from a 2.4% year-over-year gain in January.
Excluding volatile food and energy costs, last monthโs โcoreโ prices suggested lower inflation pressures. These prices rose 0.3% from January to February, down from 0.5% the previous month. And core prices rose just 2.8% from 12 months earlier โ the lowest such figure in nearly three years โ down from 2.9% in January. Economists consider core prices to be a better gauge of the likely path of future inflation.
Fridayโs report showed that a sizable jump in energy prices โ up 2.3% โ boosted the overall prices of goods by 0.5% in February. By contrast, inflation in services โ a vast range of items ranging from hotel rooms and restaurant meals to healthcare and concert tickets โ slowed to a 0.3% increase, from a 0.6% rise in January.
The figures also revealed that consumers, whose purchases drive most of the nationโs economic growth, surged 0.8% last month, up from a 0.2% gain in January. Some of that increase, though, reflected higher gasoline prices.
Annual inflation, as measured by the Fedโs preferred gauge, tumbled in 2023 after having peaked at 7.1% in mid-2022.ย Supply chain bottlenecks eased, reducing the costs of…
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