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US Producer Prices Soar in May as Energy Costs Spike

US Producer Prices Soar in May as Energy Costs Spike

On a monthly basis, producer prices climbed 0.8% in May from April, above the previous month, when they increased 0.4%.

Energy prices, led by gas, rose 5% just in May from April. Another big driver of the price gains last month was a sharp 2.9% increase in the cost of truck freight hauling, a sign that supply chain problems still aren’t fully resolved. Food costs were unchanged.

The figures indicate that rising prices will continue to erode Americans’ paychecks and wreak havoc on household budgets in the coming months. Inflation has created major political headaches for President Joe Biden and congressional Democrats and has forced the Federal Reserve into a series of rapid interest rate hikes intended to slow the economy and cool price increases.

On Friday, the government reported that inflation — as measured by the consumer price index — jumped to a new 40-year high of 8.6% in May, a surprise gain that disappointed expectations that price increases might be slowing. Gas and food costs rose sharply, pushed higher by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, but the costs for rent, new and used cars, medical care, and clothing also rose, evidence that inflation is spreading more broadly through the economy.

The Federal Reserve is expected to hike its short-term interest rate by three-quarters of a point on Wednesday, the largest increase since 1994, as it ramps up its efforts to rein in higher prices.

The producer price data captures inflation at an earlier stage of production and can sometimes signal where consumer prices are headed. It also feeds into the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation, the personal consumption expenditures price index.

Strong consumer spending has pushed up demand for a range of goods and services, which has in turn overwhelmed supply chains, creating shortages in some cases and pushing up prices. Greater demand for travel this spring and summer has also sent hotel and airfare prices soaring.

How long that consumer demand will last is a key question for the economy going forward. Millions of Americans have enjoyed solid pay raises in the past year, including lower-income workers at restaurants, hotels, and warehouses.

Consumers also have greater savings than is typically the case from government stimulus checks and because they weren’t able to spend as much on travel and entertainment in the past two years. Those savings are supporting ongoing spending even amid high prices.

Yet prices are rising at a faster pace than wages, on average, suggesting that eventually consumers may have little choice but to pull back on spending.

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NAED’s Erin Prinster, Business Intelligence Analyst, and author of NAED’ Economic and Industry Sector Outlook is analyzing the electrical industry’s inflation very closely and uses the Producer Price Index for NAICS code 4236 in her methodology.

‘The PPI for NAICS code 4236 increased in May by 1% following months of decreases, which does not mean panic nor does it mean prices are on an extreme rise again, it shows we just have to watch this carefully and note that we are still on the roller coaster.” For more analysis on inflation in the electrical industry, contact Erin Prinster @ eprinster@naed.org OR subscribe to the Economic Outlook here.*

*Note: thanks to sponsorships from Hubbell and Schneider Electric, the Economic & Industry Sector Outlook is FREE to all NAED distributor members for all of 2022. Be sure to log in to receive your special member pricing.

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