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This article originally provided by
Yahoo
October 18, 2005
Inflation Soars on Surge in Energy
Prices
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP Economics Writer1
Inflation at the wholesale level last month soared by the
largest amount in more than 15 years, reflecting the surge
in energy prices that occurred following the Gulf Coast
hurricanes.
The Labor Department reported that wholesale prices
jumped 1.9 percent in September, led by surging prices for
gasoline, natural gas and home heating oil after the
widespread shutdowns of refineries and oil platforms along
the Gulf Coast. Food prices, which had been declining,
posted the biggest increase in 11 months as the price of
eggs shot up by a record amount.
Excluding the volatile energy and food sectors, the
so-called core rate of inflation also posted a worrisome
increase of 0.3 percent after showing no increase at all in
August.
The news on wholesale prices followed a report Friday
that consumer prices had risen by 1.2 percent in September,
the biggest one-month increase in a quarter-century as
gasoline prices at the pump climbed by a record 17.9
percent.
While the core rate of inflation at the consumer level
was well-behaved, rising by a tiny 0.1 percent, the worry is
that the sizable increases in energy will soon begin to
spill over into more widespread inflation pressures.
A number of Federal Reserve officials in recent weeks
have expressed such concerns. In a speech in Tokyo on
Tuesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the
jump in energy prices "will undoubtedly be a drag from now
on."
Greenspan did not quantify how much of a slowdown will
occur, but private economists are forecasting that the hit
from Katrina and Rita could shave as much as a full
percentage point from economic growth in the final six
months of this year.
Analysts believe the Federal Reserve, which boosted
interest rates for an 11th time last month, will keep
raising rates in November and December in an effort to keep
the energy price surge from becoming embedded in more
widespread inflation pressures.
The 1.9 percent jump in wholesale prices matched a
similar rise in January 1990. The 1.9 percent jump has not
been surpassed since a 2 percent jump in November 1974, a
period when the country was coping with surging energy
prices following the 1973 Arab oil embargo.
Over the past 12 months, the Produce Price Index, which
measures inflation pressures before they reach the consumer,
has risen by 6.9 percent, the biggest 12-month change since
a rise of 7 percent in the 12 months ending in November
1990.
For September, energy prices jumped by 7.1 percent, the
biggest one-month gain since a 7.5 percent rise in October
1990. The increase reflected a 12.7 percent rise in the
price of gasoline, a 9 percent increase in natural gas and a
4.8 percent increase in home heating oil.
The price of food shot up 1.4 percent last month,
reflecting a record 49.3 percent increase in egg prices.
Vegetable prices rose by 16 percent, reflecting big
increases for snap beans, tomatoes, cabbage, potatoes and
broccoli.
Outside of food and energy, the 0.3 percent increase in
core inflation was the biggest rise since a 0.4 percent
increase in July. Over the past 12 months, core inflation at
the wholesale level is up 2.6 percent.
The price of new cars was up 0.9 percent in September
with the price of light trucks up 0.5 percent.
The PPI showed inflation pressures showing up at earlier
stages of production. The price of intermediate goods rose
by 2.5 percent, the biggest increase in 31 years, while the
price of crude goods jumped 10.2 percent, the biggest
increase in more than two years.
The concern is that businesses, which so far have held
the line on passing on the higher cost of their materials,
may be forced to start raising prices to cope with surging
energy costs. |