Inflation might be coming. The data says: not yet. In financial markets there are few things you can count on. But one thing we know will surely come up sooner rather than later are widespread ...
Nearly six years after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the underlying inflation process in advanced economies has fundamentally shifted, even as headline consumer price inflation has declined ...
When inflation surges, the first thing on the government's agenda is for the Federal Reserve to try to force up interest ...
On the economic data front, the U.S. annual inflation rate rose to 2.6% in October from 2.4% in the previous month, which is in line with market estimates. The CPI rose 0.2% month-over-month in ...
Fed Chair Jerome Powell expressed satisfaction with the progress on inflation but said he wants to see more before being confident enough to start cutting interest rates. "We want to be more confident ...
This transcript was prepared by a transcription service. This version may not be in its final form and may be updated. Jessica Mendoza: High inflation is a problem that the government has been trying ...
The so-called immaculate disinflation thesis, which gave way to a strong rally in markets in November and December, "is likely to be challenged during the first half of the year," said JPMorgan Chase ...
Markets behave as if the UK inflation process has changed. The data suggest it has not. Britain has been hit by one shock after another since 2020 — pandemic supply disruptions, the energy crisis ...
My friend Jared Bernstein calls our attention to the rebirth of the inflation hawks. Apparently, there is a new craze among economists to say that we are in a period of structurally higher inflation.
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