Inflation, Tariffs, and the Fed

The Federal Reserve made it clear on Wednesday that it’s not about to cut short-term interest rates again anytime soon, which is good news if you’d like to see the Fed live up to its goal of bringing inflation down to 2.0%.

After all, progress toward that 2.0% goal has stalled. PCE prices, the Fed’s favorite measure of inflation, increased 2.6% in 2024, barely better than the 2.7% climb in the twelve months ending December 2023. Core prices, which exclude food and energy, climbed 2.8% last year, slightly above overall inflation.

Meanwhile, SuperCore prices, which exclude food and energy, but also all other goods and housing rents, rose 3.5% in 2024 versus a 3.4% climb in the year ending in December 2023. That’s right…SuperCore inflation was worse in 2024 than in 2023!

We like to pay attention to this measure not because we think it’s a great inflation measure but because a few years ago the Fed was telling investors and the general public to watch it, but then mysteriously stopped talking about it when SuperCore stopped telling the story of rapid inflation reduction the Fed wanted to tell.