US Inflation Hit a New 40-Year High Last Month of 8.6%

6
On Wednesday June 8, 2022, gas prices raise to $5.09 per gallon at the BP, 7 Eleven on Mcknight Road in Pittsburgh, Pa. (Mary Flavin/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP)

WASHINGTON (AP) — The costs of gas, food and other necessities jumped in May, raising inflation to a new four-decade high and giving American households no respite from rising costs.

Join our WhatsApp group

Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


Consumer prices surged 8.6% last month from 12 months earlier, faster than April’s year-over-year surge of 8.3%, the Labor Department said Friday.

On a month-to-month basis, prices jumped 1% from April to May, a steep rise from the 0.3% increase from March to April. Much higher gas prices were to blame for most of that increase.

America’s rampant inflation is imposing severe pressures on families, forcing them to pay much more for food, gas and rent and reducing their ability to afford discretionary items, from haircuts to electronics. Lower-income and Black and Hispanic Americans, in particular, are struggling because, on average, a larger proportion of their income is consumed by necessities.

Economists do expect inflation to ease this year, though not by very much. Some analysts have forecast that the inflation gauge the government reported Friday — the consumer price index — may drop below 7% by year’s end. In March, the year-over-year CPI reached 8.5%, the highest such rate since 1982.

High inflation has also forced the Federal Reserve into what will likely be the fastest series of interest rate hikes in three decades. By raising borrowing costs aggressively, the Fed hopes to cool spending and growth enough to curb inflation without tipping the economy into a recession. For the central bank, it will be a difficult balancing act.

Surveys show that Americans see high inflation as the nation’s top problem, and most disapprove of President Joe Biden’s handling of the economy. Congressional Republicans are hammering Democrats on the issue in the run-up to midterm elections this fall.

Inflation has remained high even as the sources of rising prices have shifted. Initially, robust demand for goods from Americans who were stuck at home for months after COVID hit caused shortages and supply chain snarls and drove up prices for cars, furniture and appliances.

Now, as Americans resume spending on services, including travel, entertainment and dining out, the costs of airline tickets, hotel rooms and restaurant meals have soared. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has further accelerated the prices of oil and natural gas. And with China easing strict COVID lockdowns in Shanghai and elsewhere, more of its citizens are driving, thereby sending oil prices up even further.

Goods prices are expected to fall in the coming months. Many large retailers, including Target, Walmart and Macy’s, have reported that they’re now stuck with too much of the patio furniture, electronics and other goods that they ordered when those items were in heavier demand and will have to discount them.

Even so, rising gas prices are eroding the finances of millions of Americans. Prices at the pump are averaging nearly $5 a gallon nationally and edging closer to the inflation-adjusted record of about $5.40 reached in 2008.

Research by the Bank of America Institute, which uses anonymous data from millions of their customers’ credit and debit card accounts, shows spending on gas eating up a larger share of consumers’ budgets and crowding out their ability to buy other items.

For lower-income households — defined as those with incomes below $50,000 — spending on gas reached nearly 10% of all spending on credit and debit cards in the last week of May, the institute said in a report this week. That’s up from about 7.5% in February, a steep increase in such a short period.

Spending by all the bank’s customers on long-lasting goods, like furniture, electronics and home improvement, has plunged from a year ago, the institute found. But their spending on plane tickets, hotels and entertainment has continued to rise.

Economists have pointed to that shift in spending from goods to services as a trend that should help lower inflation by year’s end. But with wages rising steadily for many workers, prices are rising in services as well.


Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


Connect with VINnews

Join our WhatsApp group


6 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Triumpinwhitehouse
Triumpinwhitehouse
1 year ago

Thanks Brandon

Keep voting for the Democrats.
Keep voting for the Democrats.
1 year ago

Thanks to Decrepit Joe and the rest of the gang at the white house.

Waltzing Mathilda
Waltzing Mathilda
1 year ago

Leave me alone with inflation, street crime , citizens’safety and such dry noodles. It’s the INSURRECTION , stupid. I’m fixated on insurrection . There was insurrection , where’ve you been ? Schumer barking , threatening violence , so what , dummy ? Insurrection there was .

Ben
Ben
1 year ago

Well you voted for this clown who is on his way to the nursing home. Thanks liberals how you feel now? when you at the gas pump. The gas prices are so high even reform Jews are walking to Shul on Shabos../

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
1 year ago

Yes Qaxzc it’s Bidens fault.
For way to long he has said it’s transtionary.
Yes the whole world is suffering but this is the USA. We have the resources and we are the most resourceful nation. There are policies and actions we can take to curtail this

Richard Blumenthal
Richard Blumenthal
1 year ago

President Biden is a natural born leader. I fought alongside him on the killing fields of Vietnam and Cambodia.