Business & Tech

Puget Sound Inflation Slower To Cool Than Much Of US

While the nationwide rate of inflation dipped in December, prices around the Seattle area actually ticked up. Here's what to know.

December food prices remained well above the year-over-year inflation rate, at 11.8 percent.
December food prices remained well above the year-over-year inflation rate, at 11.8 percent. (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

SEATTLE — Nationwide inflation cooled again in December, bolstering hopes the Federal Reserve will do the same with interest rate hikes that have increased Americans' borrowing costs, but consumer prices in the greater Seattle area actually ticked up, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

As the national rate of inflation dipped to 6.5 percent last month, Seattle saw costs for consumer goods increase by 0.1 percent, with prices 8.4 percent higher than in December 2021.

It was the sixth straight year-over-year slowdown in the consumer price index, according to the new inflation report released Thursday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. On a national basis, prices slipped 0.1 percent from November to December, the first such drop since May 2020.

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Lower fuel costs helped drive inflation in the right direction. The national average for a gallon of gas declined from a $5-a-gallon peak in June to $3.27 a gallon Thursday, according to AAA. In Washington, the average price for a gallon of gas was $3.95 Thursday, down from $4.11 the month before.

However, energy and grocery costs remain stubbornly high. All energy costs saw a 7.3 percent year-over-year increase. Natural gas and electricity costs soared 19.3 percent and 14.3 percent, respectively.

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December food prices remained well above the year-over-year inflation rate, at 11.8 percent higher than in December 2021. The price of eggs jumped the most, costing 11.1 percent more than at the same time the previous year, due to unresolved pandemic-related supply chain issues and a widespread bird flu outbreak the Agriculture Department said wiped out 44 million egg-laying hens.

Around Seattle, Bellevue and Tacoma, overall food prices were up 11.3 percent over the year, and energy prices increased 5.7 percent. Prices for cereal and bakery products were up nearly 18 percent, followed by dairy products at nearly 16 percent.

The softer readings in the report add to growing signs the worst inflation in about 40 years is gradually waning. Still, the Fed doesn’t expect inflation to slow enough to get close to its 2 percent target until well into 2024. The central bank is expected to raise its benchmark rate by at least a quarter-point when it next meets at the end of this month.

Last week’s jobs report for December bolstered the possibility that a recession could be avoided. Even as the central bank has jacked up its benchmark rate at the fastest pace in four decades and inflation remained high, the economy has kept growing and businesses have kept hiring. In December, employers added a solid 223,000 jobs, and the unemployment rate dropped back to 3.5 percent, matching a 53-year low.

At the same time, average hourly pay growth slowed, which should lessen pressure on companies to raise prices to cover their higher labor costs.

Another positive sign for the Fed’s efforts to quell inflation is that Americans overall expect price increases to decline over the next few years. That is important because so-called “inflation expectations” can be self-fulfilling: If people expect prices to keep rising sharply, they will typically take steps, like demanding higher pay, that can perpetuate high inflation.

On Monday, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said that consumers now anticipate inflation of 5 percent over the next year.

That’s the lowest such expectation in nearly 18 months. Over the next five years, consumers expect inflation to average 2.4 percent, only barely above the Fed’s 2 percent target.

Still, in their remarks in recent weeks, Fed officials have underscored their intent to raise their benchmark short-term rate by an additional three-quarters of a point in the coming months to just above 5 percent. Such increases would come on top of seven hikes last year, which led mortgage rates to nearly double and made auto loans and business borrowing more expensive.

The Associated Press contributed reporting.


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