November inflation at 2.7%, lower than expected
Consumer prices rose by 0.2% in the two month period between September and November.
In the past 12 months, overall prices rose by 2.7%, which marks a slowdown from 3% reported in September, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Due to the federal government shutdown, BLS did not collect survey data in October. Instead, BLS retroactively acquired nonsurvey data from October and resumed its data collection efforts on Nov. 14, after the government reopened.
The index for shelter rose by 0.2% and the energy index rose by 1.1% over the two month period ending in November. Food prices increased by 0.1% during the same two-month period.
The inflation index for energy prices over the past 12-months rose by 4.2%. Over the past 12 months, gasoline prices increased by 0.9%; fuel oil rose by 11.3%; natural gas rose by 9.1%; electricity increased by 6.9%.
Overall food prices increased by 2.6% over the last year with meats, poultry, fish and eggs rising by 4.87%; nonalcoholic beverages increased 4.3%; cereals and bakery products increased 1.9%; and fruit and vegetables rose 0.1%. Dairy and “related products” saw a decrease of 1.6% over the same 12-month period.
Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal, said inflation came in lower than expected in November.
“It’s hard to read too much into the data given how much the shutdown impacted data collection,” Long said in a social media post Thursday.
In an address to the nation Wednesday night, President Donald Trump said “inflation is stopped.”
Trump said if prices haven’t fallen, they will soon.
“Prices on electricity and everything else will fall dramatically,” Trump said.
In June 2022, the United States experienced a 40-year peak of inflation at 9.1%. It has fallen since then and remained around 3% over the last several months.
Latest News Stories
ABC pauses Kimmel over comments on Charlie Kirk assassination
Advocates debate free speech, executive power over student deportations
Survey: Teachers not optimistic about the future of education
Congressman calls Patel a ‘breath of fresh air’ for the FBI
Arizona Senate leader seeks to rename highway after Kirk
Southern California events canceled because of ICE
House committee to investigate nexus between CCP, ‘civil unrest’
Report: Congress authorized $15 trillion in ’emergency’ deficit spending since 1991
House Dems press Patel on handling of the Epstein files
Illinois quick hits: Suspect in custody after state senator’s home struck with gunfire
WATCH: Governor candidate: Low-cost districts shine while most IL schools spend, fail
Fed cuts rates after holding off for months amid tariff turmoil