News
Personal consumption expenditures and the PCE Price Index are two different measurements. PCE measures consumer spending on goods and services, while the PCEPI measures the prices of those goods ...
The Council of Economic Advisers, chaired by Stephen Miran, said in a report this month that, using an analysis of a price ...
The PCE price index was projected to rise 0.1% in May, with the annual inflation rate at 2.3%, according to the Dow Jones consensus.
Economists warned that a barrage of new U.S. tariffs could trigger a renewed bout of inflation. So why aren't prices surging?
The hottest question in economics is why the massive price hikes tariffs were supposed to bring still haven’t materialized halfway through 2025.
One of the key indicators showed a slight acceleration in prices last month. But nothing is definitive yet. Expectations are rising at the Fed.
But the personal consumption expenditures price index didn’t swing much from last month. And it’s unclear when or if Americans will feel a big impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs at ...
The personal consumption expenditures price index, or PCE, inched higher in May, the latest sign that inflation remains stubbornly above the Federal Reserve's 2% annual target. Prices rose 2.3% in May ...
Personal income in the U.S. fell by $109.6 billion (0.4%) in May, driven primarily by declines in government benefits and farm income. Consumer spe ...
Price increases have largely stabilized compared to recent years, according to the latest personal consumption expenditures price index, a Bureau of Economic Analysis report released on May 30.
Notably, the report did not include a hypothetical projection in which tariffs did not take effect, but asserted that "[t]his analysis suggests that tariffs have not reduced the disinflationary ...
The economic data this week tells a story of resilient consumers facing mounting headwinds. Inflation pressures remain ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results