Commentary
Well, that left nothing to the imagination. The August CPI report, in fact, buried the idea that inflation is abating and that new “juice” from the Fed is just around the corner.
Again, the trusty 16 percent trimmed mean CPI, which removes short-term fluctuations from the trend, made it abundantly clear that inflation has a strong head of steam. The Y/Y number was up by a record +7.2 percent.
That’s more than double the 3.2 percent reading of August 2021, and by far the highest print since the series was established in 1985.

That is, gasoline prices rose by a “mere” 26 percent Y/Y in August compared to a sizzling peak gain of 60 percent in June. However, the Y/Y increases in electric utility prices and pipeline gas for home heating continued to climb higher:
- Electric utilities (brown line) was up 15.8 percent in August compared to 11.1 percent in March;
- Pipeline gas prices (purple line) were up 33.0 percent in August compared to 21.6 percent in March.
In a word, there is still plenty of energy inflation momentum in the CPI, even if pump prices for gasoline have taken a relative breather. But even there, the 26 percent gain Y/Y is not exactly deflationary when it comes to family budgets.

In fact, the August Y/Y gain of 11.4 percent was more than triple the year ago gain (3.7 percent) and the highest increase in 43 years. You have to go back to the roaring commodity markets of 1979 to find an equivalent slam on household food budgets.

Needless to say, restaurant menu prices will soon catch up with underlying food costs as represented by the black line for food at home; and on top of that lies the further cost pressure of rapidly rising restaurant wages.


Needless to say, the right-hand portion of the chart below gives no indication that the main drivers of the CPI—domestic services—are about to roll over anytime soon. Last August, in fact, the services CPI was running at just 3.0 percent on a Y/Y basis, which accelerated to 4.6 percent by January and is now pushing 7.0 percent.


Finally, the August CPI once again reminded of the contribution of shelter and rent inflation to the inflationary momentum now underway. That sub-index was up by 6.3 percent in August—more than double its pre-COVID trend–and actually accelerated from prior months.

But the fact is, Tuesday’s, Sept. 13, CPI report destroyed the idea that the Fed will pause soon. In fact, excluding volatile food and energy prices, the so-called core CPI rose 0.6 percent, which if sustained would be an annual rate above 7 percent.
That’s higher than any time from 1991 to the pandemic; and it’s also what the paint-by-the numbers folks at the Eccles Building watch like a hawk.
Originally published on DavidStockmansCorner, reposted from the Brownstone Institute
Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.






















