The Consumer Price Index, the government's key measure of inflation, advanced 1.1 percent during the month, the biggest monthly rise since June 1982, the Labor Department said. That was well above the 0.7 percent increase economists polled ahead of the report were expecting.WASHINGTON
(Reuters) - Consumer prices in June rose by the biggest amount since
1982 on a continued surge in gasoline prices, adding more weight to an
economy struggling through a financial crisis and a housing downturn, a
government report on Wednesday showed.
The Consumer Price Index, the government's key measure of inflation,
advanced 1.1 percent during the month, the biggest monthly rise since
June 1982, the Labor Department said. That was well above the 0.7
percent increase economists polled ahead of the report were expecting.
Prices were up 5 percent from a year ago, the biggest year-on-year
rise since 1991 the department said. That gain was also considerably
higher than the 4.5 percent rise Wall Street economists were expecting.
Taking into account those price increases, weekly earnings fell 0.9
percent in June, the biggest decrease since September 2005 in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
Excluding volatile food and energy prices, the so-called core CPI
rose by a more tame 0.3 percent, but that rise was still higher than
the 0.2 percent gain expected.
Energy prices advanced 6.6 percent during the month, reflecting a
10.1 percent surge in gasoline prices as consumers are paying well in
excess of $4.00 a gallon. The department said energy costs accounted
for roughly two-thirds of the overall monthly increase in consumer
prices.
In the report, airline fares jumped by 4.5 percent in June as
carriers lumped in surcharges for extra baggage and food to help offset
higher fuel costs.
Economists said the big rise in consumer prices makes the Fed's task
of shoring up economic growth and curbing inflation more difficult.
"This increases concern that the Fed is not going to be able to
lower interest rates if the economy remains weak. And as long as the
economy remains weak, it will be hard for the Fed to raise rates to
fight inflation," said Gary Thayer, chief economist at Wachovia
Securities in St. Louis.
He noted the core inflation rate is now 2.4 percent for the year
ended in June, which shows that some of the increases in commodity
prices are spreading to the prices of other goods.
Concerns about inflation will no doubt be raised again by Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke when he appears before a House panel
later on Wednesday to complete the second leg of the central bank's
twice-annual report to Congress on the health of the economy.
(Reporting by Joanne Morrison; Editing by Neil Stempleman)
© Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved