Inflation rises on wholesale level by smallest amount in five months

WASHINGTON - Inflation at the wholesale level edged up by the smallest amount in five months in July as falling food prices helped offset another rise in energy costs.

By (AP)

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Published: Tue 15 Aug 2006, 9:50 PM

Last updated: Sat 4 Apr 2015, 2:13 PM

The Labour Department reported that wholesale prices increased a slight 0.1 percent in July, far below the 0.5 percent jump in June. The improvement reflected a retreat in food prices, which fell by 0.3 percent in July, after having surged by 1.4 percent in June, which had been the biggest increase in nearly two years.

Federal Reserve policy-makers broke a two-year string of interest rate increases last week, saying they believed that a slowing economy would help restrain inflation pressures. But some private economists are worried that the relentless rise in energy costs could force the Fed to resume rate increases in coming months.

The 0.1 percent rise in the government’s Producer Price Index represented the smallest amount of inflation since wholesale prices actually fell by 1.2 percent in February.

Excluding volatile food and energy, core wholesale inflation fell by 0.3 percent in July. That was the best showing for core inflation in nine months, since a similar 0.3 percent decline last October.

Price pressures have been accelerating this year as energy costs have soared, reflecting rising tensions in the Middle East and tight supplies because of increased demand from emerging economies such as China.

Crude oil hit a record high, closing at $77.03 per barrel in New York trading on July 14. The increases in crude prices have pushed gasoline costs above $3 per gallon in many parts of the country, increases that have spurred rising voter unhappiness with the economic policies of the Bush administration.

For July, energy prices were up 1.3 percent, the biggest increase since a 4 percent jump in April. Gasoline prices were up 0.7 percent, natural gas for home use was up 0.9 percent and residential electricity costs jumped 1.8 percent, the biggest increase since January.


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