Inflation steady, but tariff toll seen
Core figures that reflects long-term trends up 0.3%
By: Paul Davidson
USA Today
..... Inflation held steady in July [2025] as President Donald Trump's sweeping import tariffs took a toll on some U.S. consumer prices.
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Prices overall increased 2.7% from a year earlier, [2024] similarly to June, [2025] according to the Labor Department's consumer price index, a measure of average changes in goods and services costs.
..... On a monthly basis, costs increased 0.2% after rising 0.3% the previous month.
..... But an underlying inflation measure accelerated more than expected as prices of some goods typically imported from China, such as furniture and video and audio products, rose sharply.
..... Core inflation, which excludes volatile food and energy items and is watched closely by the Federal Reserve because it better reflects longer-term trends, increased 0.3% - a six month high - after rising 0.2% in June. [2025] That nudged the annual increase from 2.9% to 3.1%, the highest since February. [2025]
..... Some economists said the numbers won't be enough to keep the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates in September. [2025]
..... Looking at the details, gasoline prices fell 2.2%, the fifth drop in the last six months, and are down 9.5% over the past year. [2024] Regular unleaded averaged $3.14 a gallon August 11, [2025] down form $3.16 a month ago and $3.45 a year ago, [2024] according to AAA.
..... Oil prices have fallen this year [2025] on concerns the trade war will hurt the global economy and increased oil productions by OPEC counties. That has led gas prices lower.
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Average rent increased 0.3%, pushing down the annual increase to 3.5%, the smallest since December 2021. Lower rents for new leases are finally pulling down rates for existing tenants.
..... Housing costs have been the biggest inflation driver, making up 35% of overall price increases in July. [2025]
..... Other service costs also increased sharply. airline fares jumped 4% after falling for several months. Medical care costs rose 0.8%, and car maintenance and repair bills jumped 1%.
..... But car insurance costs, which generally have surged since the pandemic, edged up just 0.1%, and hotel rates fell 1%.
..... Grocery costs dipped 0.1% following a 0.3% rise the previous month.
..... Egg prices tumbled 3.9%, continuing a recent decline amid the easing of a bird flu outbreak hat had caused prices to soar. Other staples also got less expensive, with breakfast cereal prices down 0.7%; rice off 0.6%; chicken, 0.4%; and fresh fish and seafood, 0.5%.
..... Some other items got pricier, with uncooked ground beef rising 2.4%; bacon, 0.6%; and bread, 0.4%.
..... Inflation has been pulled by conflicting forces this year. [2025] On the one hand, services prices that soared following the COVID-19 pandemic have climbed more modestly or drifted lower.
..... Rent hikes, for example, have softened. Wage increases have slowed as pandemic-realted labor shortages eased. And Americans grappling with higher inflation have reined in their spending on travel and recreational activities, generally lowering airfares and hotel rates.
..... Absent the tariffs, yearly inflation likely would already be at the Fed's 2% goal, economists have said.
..... But the tariffs, which had minimal effects on consumer prices through the first five months of 2025, began delivering a bigger blow in June, [2025] and forecasters expect a growing impact on the cost of goods over the next few months.
..... Duties already in effect for weeks or months include a 30% tax on Chinese imports, 50% on steel and aluminum and 25% on foreign cars. The average U.S. tariff rate has jumped from less than 3% in January [2025 to 15% to 20%.
..... Retailers and manufactures cushioned the hit to consumers by stocking up on investor before the levies took effect and absorbing some cost increases themselves, among other strategies. But economists say those tactics regularity have played out.
..... The cost of goods likely to be affected by tariffs turned in a mixed showing in the July [2025] report. Furniture prices increased 0.9%, and video and audio pr ducted rose 0.8%. But apparel ticked up just 0.1%, and toys were up 0.2%.
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"Some monthly variations in price changes is normal and it remains the case that prices have risen the most since January [2205] for goods that are primarily imported," economist Sam Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics wrote in a note to clients.
..... The White House has erased deals with trading partners such as Japan, South Korea, Vietnam and the U.K. that set tariffs at 10% to 20%. On August 7, [2025] Trump imposed levies of 10% to 50% on dozens of countries that didn't rerach agreements with the United States.
..... In other words, the most far-reaching charges are looming.
..... By year's end, [2025] Barclays expects overall inflation to reach 3.4% with the core reading hitting 3.7%.
..... Although core inflation picked up, some economists said the moderate tariff impact won't keep the Fed from lowering intent rates in September. [2025]
..... The Fed raises rates, or keeps them higher for longer, to fight inflation and lower them to stimulate a weak economy. Tariffs are expected to both raise inflation and hobble growth, posing a dilemma for the central bank as it determines which challenge is more formidable.
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"Although core annual inflation is back to its highest level since February, [2025] today's CPI print ins not hot enough to derail the Fed from cutting rates in September," [2025] said Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management. "there is some sign of tariff pass-through to consumer prices, but, at this stage, it is not significant enough to ring alarm bells."
..... With the labor market seemingly on solid footing, Fed Chair Jerome Powell hinted in July [2025] that officials could wait until later in the year [2025] to lower rates to assess the effects of the tariffs. The central bank slashed relates by 1 percentage points late in 2024 but has paused since December. [2024]
..... After a dismal jobs report revealed just 73,000 payroll gains in July [2025] and historically large downward revisions for the prior tow months, Fed funds futures market raised the odds of a September [2025] rate cut to 86%. A report on employment in August, [2025] due out in early September, [2025] could determine the Fed's decision.