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Inflation gauge watched by Fed eased in July, but prices still up 6.3%

Inflation eased last month a꧅s energy prices tumbled, raising hopes that the surging costs of everything from gasoline to food may have peaked💜.

According to a Commerce Department report Friday that is closely watched by the Federal Reserve, consumer prices rose 6.3% in July from a year earlier after posting an annual increase of 6.8% in June, the biggest jump sinc☂e 1982. Energy prices made the difference in July: They dropped last month after surging in June.

So-called core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, rꦰose 4.6% last month from a year earlier after rising 4.8% in June. The drop — along with a reduction in the Labor Department’s consumer price index last 𒐪month — suggests that inflationary pressures may be easing.

On a monthly basis, consumer prices actually fell 0.1% from June to July; core inflation blipped u൲p 0.1%, the Commerce 🍃Department reported.

Earlier this month, the Labor Department’s consumer price index showed inflation surged 8.5% in July, hovering at a four-decade high.

Inflation started rising sharply in the spring of 2021 as the economy rebounded with surprising speed from the short but devastating coronavirus recession a year earlier. Surging customer orders overwhelmed factories, ports and freight yards, leading to delays, shortages and higher prices. Inflation is a 🐟worldwide problem, especially since the 𒁏Russian invasion of Ukraine drove up global food and energy prices.

On Friday, regulators in the UꦛK said that residents will see an  in their annual household energy bills.

In the US, the Commerce Department’s personal consumption expenditures index is less well k🅺nown than the Labor Department’s consumer price index.

But the Fed prefers the PCE index as a gauge of inflationary pressures, partly because the Commerce index attempts to measure how consumers ad🥃just to rising prices by, for example, substituting cheaper store brands for pricier name brands.

There is𒁏 evidence just♒ in the last several months that 

The Commerce Department also reported Friday that Americans’ after-tax personal income rose 0.3% from June to July after adjusting for inflation; it has fallen in Ju🐻ne. Consumer spending rose 0.2% last month after accounting for higher prices.

The Fed was slow to respond to rising inflation, thinking it the temporary result of supply chain bottlenecks. But as prices continued to climb, the central bank moved aggressively, hiking its benchmark interest rate four times since March.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell gave a speech Friday at an economic conference in Jackson Hole, Wy.,  saying that American households and businesses can expect to experience “pain” as the central bank aims to brin🔴g down soaring rates of inflation.

“Admittedly, with headline PCE inflation still at 6.3% and core PCE inflation at 4.6%, we don’t expect the Fed suddenly to announce a pivot at Jackson H🐻ole,″ Paul Ashworth, chief 𒀰North America economist at Capital Economics, said in a research note. “But even better news on inflation over the coming months is likely to convince the Fed to change course next year, despite any hawkish rhetoric coming from officials now.″