United States: CPI (YoY)

Macro

2026-05-12

Description

The United States Consumer Price Index (CPI) is calculated and published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), measuring the changes in prices of goods and services purchased by consumers over time. The Core CPI excludes the volatile prices of food and energy items, providing a more stable measure of inflation.

As the most widely used measure of inflation, the Federal Reserve has set a target of 2% inflation to ensure economic growth while allowing the market to assess whether the economy is overheating and to evaluate the appropriateness of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.

Note: The difference between Seasonally Adjusted (SA) and Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA) data lies in the fact that SA data is adjusted to eliminate the effects of seasonal patterns, providing a clearer view of long-term trends and underlying economic conditions.

Published by
United States Department of Labor (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update

AI Data Insight

The US CPI YoY growth rate for Q2 (April) 2026 jumped to 3.8%, a significant rebound from the previous 3.3% and higher than market expectations. Driven by soaring energy prices triggered by geopolitical tensions, both gasoline and core inflation have risen simultaneously. The persistently high stickiness of inflation may force the Federal Reserve to delay interest rate cuts, adding to market concerns about an economic downturn.

AI Data Insight

The US CPI YoY growth rate for Q2 (April) 2026 jumped to 3.8%, a significant rebound from the previous 3.3% and higher than market expectations. Driven by soaring energy prices triggered by geopolitical tensions, both gasoline and core inflation have risen simultaneously. The persistently high stickiness of inflation may force the Federal Reserve to delay interest rate cuts, adding to market concerns about an economic downturn.

Description

The United States Consumer Price Index (CPI) is calculated and published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), measuring the changes in prices of goods and services purchased by consumers over time. The Core CPI excludes the volatile prices of food and energy items, providing a more stable measure of inflation.

As the most widely used measure of inflation, the Federal Reserve has set a target of 2% inflation to ensure economic growth while allowing the market to assess whether the economy is overheating and to evaluate the appropriateness of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy.

Note: The difference between Seasonally Adjusted (SA) and Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA) data lies in the fact that SA data is adjusted to eliminate the effects of seasonal patterns, providing a clearer view of long-term trends and underlying economic conditions.

Published by
United States Department of Labor (Choice)
Frequency
Monthly
Next Update