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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowU.S. wholesale prices ticked up just 0.2% in July, the latest sign that inflationary pressures are largely in check.
The Labor Department said Friday that the producer price index—which measures price changes before they reach the consumer—increased 1.7% last month compared with a year ago, the same as June. Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, wholesale prices fell 0.1% in July and rose 2.1% from a year earlier.
Inflation is muted, even as the economy has entered its 11th year of expansion and the unemployment rate has fallen to 3.7%, near a five-decade low. Yet wages are rising only modestly and many businesses are reluctant to raise prices in the face of online and global competition.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell cited low inflation last month as a key reason the Fed cut short-term interest rates.
The Fed targets an inflation rate of 2% as a hedge against deflation, a destabilizing fall in prices and wages. Yet price gains have mostly missed that target since the Fed adopted it seven years ago. With wage growth weak, companies haven’t been forced to lift prices to offset higher pay.
In July, wholesale inflation was driven largely by higher energy costs, including a 5.2% increase in gas prices and an 8% rise in the cost of home heating oil.
Hotel room prices fell 4.3% last month and physician care services dropped 0.5%. Food prices ticked up 0.2%, led by a 10.3% jump in the price of corn.
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