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NYTimes
New York Times
28 Feb 2025
Edmund Lee


NextImg:Inflation Is Rising. What Will That Mean for Trump’s Tariffs?
Image
ImageTwo shoppers look at a wall of products including butter at a grocery store.
Stubbornly high inflation is beginning to weigh on households, with sentiment souring fast, economists note.Credit...Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Rising prices hit a trade war

President Trump isn’t backing off his tariff threats, despite the potential risk to the U.S. economy and financial markets.

That puts additional focus on the latest Personal Consumption Expenditures report, the Fed’s favored inflation measure. It’s due for release at 8:30 a.m. Eastern.

The question is whether lingering inflation also will have big implications for the Trump agenda, with some economists predicting that tariffs will raise inflation and lower growth, even if the target countries don’t retaliate. Friday’s report is expected to show only slight relief for consumers.

Economists worry about a hot P.C.E. reading, which could push the central bank to keep borrowing costs higher well into the second half of the year, even as consumer confidence and the mood in the C-suites increasingly turn south and the economy shows signs of slowing.

A recession is seen as unlikely, but there are other concerns. Recent data shows a growing affordability crunch with egg prices spiking (more on that below), home sales plummeting and jobless claims climbing. Watch next week’s jobs report for more, including which parts of the country could be hardest hit by Elon Musk-led cuts to the federal government. (Alaska is among them.)

“With 3 million federal employees potentially worrying about their jobs and 6 million federal contractors worrying about their jobs, the risks are rising that households may begin to hold back purchases of cars, computers, washers, dryers, vacation travel plans, etc.,” Torsten Slok, Apollo’s chief economist, wrote in a research note on Thursday. Sentiment, he added, is “bad.”


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