Inflation erases wage gains for first time in 3 years
The cost of everything feels too damn high, and now you have the numbers to prove it: Surging energy prices drove inflation to a three-year high in April, the Bureau of Labour Statistics reported yesterday, marking the first time since 2023 that the cost of living has outpaced average paycheck growth in the US. Top line: Annual wage growth slowed to 3.6% last month, while year-over-year inflation hit 3.8%—up from 3.3% in March and 2.4% in February (before the US and Israel struck Iran). In April:
Even without those volatile categories, core CPI still hit 2.8% last month, well above the Fed’s 2% goal. This was buoyed by higher airfares, streaming services like Netflix raising prices, and a one-time adjustment in rental costs stemming from the data blackout of last year’s government shutdown. “Inflation is eating up all wage gains,” a chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union told CNBC. “This is a setback for middle-class and lower-income households and they know it.” In a recent CNN poll:
Looking ahead…though incoming Fed chair Kevin Warsh has generally called for lower interest rates, the latest inflation data made traders more bullish on a rate hike by the end of the year. |
