This Key Inflation Measure Just Saw Its Biggest Gain On Record


By Anneken Tappe, CNN Business

(CNN) — US inflation kept moving higher in March and the Producer Price Index is the latest data point showing the price pressure.

The index, which measures what America’s producers get paid for their goods and services on average over time, rose 11.2% in the year ended in March, not adjusted for seasonal swings, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Wednesday.

It was the biggest jump in prices since the data series began in November 2010, exceeding analysts’ expectations and the double-digit jumps recorded in the first two months of the year.

Between February and March, prices for finished goods and services rose 1.4% with seasonal adjustmentsThat was more than expected and more than in each of the prior two months. Over half of the increase seen in goods prices was due to a 5.7% price jump for energy products.

Diesel fuel prices rose 20.4%, for example, and the cost of gasoline, jet fuel and electrical power also increased. Fresh and dry vegetables, iron and steel scrap got more expensive, as well.

US oil and gasoline prices soared in March on the back of the Ukraine conflict, which threw a wrench into global commodities markets.

But even stripping out the more volatile components like energy, food and trade services, March prices on finished goods and services increased 0.9%, the biggest jump since January 2021 and almost twice what analysts were expecting.

Wednesday’s data comes just one day after the Consumer Price Index showed that the cost of consumer goods and services surged by 8.5% year over year, the highest recorded level since 1981.

This is a developing story. It will be updated

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