Home / Finance / Here’s the inflation breakdown for September 2023 — in one chart

Here’s the inflation breakdown for September 2023 — in one chart


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Inflation was unchanged in September, but price pressures seem poised to continue their broad and gradual easing in coming months, according to economists.

In September, the consumer price index increased 3.7% from 12 months earlier, the same rate as in August, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics said Thursday.

The latest reading is a significant improvement on the pandemic-era peak of 9.1% in June 2022 — the highest rate since November 1981.

“The speed of the decline is always going to be uncertain,” said Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. “But anywhere you look, [data] suggests inflation should be falling rather than rising.”

The CPI is a key barometer of inflation, measuring how quickly the prices of anything from fruits and vegetables to haircuts and concert tickets are changing across the U.S. economy.

Despite recent improvements, economists say it will take a while for inflation to return to normal, stable levels.

The U.S. Federal Reserve aims for a 2% annual inflation rate over the long-term. Fed officials don’t expect that to happen until 2026.

“Ultimately, inflation is still the most menacing issue in the economy right now,” said Sarah House, senior economist at Wells Fargo Economics. “We’re edging our way back [to target], but there’s still quite a bit of ground to cover,” she added.

Gas prices still something consumers ‘contend with’

Housing inflation continues to move downward

Inflation could be back to its target by this time next year, says Moody's Mark Zandi

However, the housing-price trend “remains firmly downward,” and should continue to slow through roughly summer next year, House said.

“That will be an important source of the overall rate of disinflation as we move through 2024,” she said.

Other categories with “notable” increases in the past year include motor vehicle insurance (up 18.9%), recreation (up 3.9%), personal care (up 6.1%) and new vehicles (up 2.5%), BLS said.

Why inflation is returning to normal

At a high level, inflationary pressures — which have been felt globally — are due to an imbalance between supply and demand.

Energy prices spiked in early 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine. Supply chains were snarled when the U.S. economy restarted during the Covid-19 pandemic, driving up prices for goods. Consumers, flush with cash from government stimulus and staying home for a year, spent liberally. Wages grew at their fastest pace in decades, pushing up business’ costs.

Now, those pressures have largely eased, economists said.

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