Skip to main content

Income & Spending (May)

The core PCE deflator increased by only 0.08% m/m in May and, even allowing for some modest upward revisions to the gains in earlier months, that was enough to pull the annual core inflation rate down to 2.57%, from 2.78%. The breakdown was also encouraging. Despite a massive 1.3% m/m increase in hospital prices, 2% plus declines in portfolio management and air transportation prices mean that core services (ex housing) prices, aka supercore, increased by only 0.09%. There is a good chance that core PCE inflation will fall to 2.5% in June, although unfavourable base effects make a further decline in the second half of this year unlikely. Still the Fed’s median projection that core inflation will be 2.8% in the fourth quarter now looks too pessimistic.

Become a client to read more

This is premium content that requires an active Capital Economics subscription to view.

Already have an account?

You may already have access to this premium content as part of a paid subscription.

Sign in to read the content in full or get details of how you can access it

Register for free

Sign up for a free account to:

  • Unlock additional content
  • Register for Capital Economics events
  • Receive email updates and economist-curated newsletters
  • Request a free trial of our services


Get access