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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsFrom electricity to rent, monthly bills are tipping the inflation scale
Tiffany Tagbo has been working two jobs - one full-time, one part-time - to make ends meet for most of the past decade, ever since the first of her two daughters was born. But a few months ago, her supplemental work expanded to 40 hours a week, and she began training for a third role.
I found myself really working more than 80 hours a week just to be able to support my family during this difficult time, said the 41-year-old Oklahoma City resident. The $400 a month she paid for health insurance consumed about half of her paycheck from her job managing a suicide prevention hotline. At the grocery store, there are calculations on even relatively small purchases, such as whether to buy eggs or her 4-year-olds favorite cheese sticks.
Tagbo, who is now working with children with autism, follows the news closely and is aware that, by some measures, the costs of everyday life arent setting off as many alarm bells as a few years ago. Last month, consumer prices climbed at a 2.9 percent annual rate, government data show, well below the 9 percent recorded in June 2022. But when youre living paycheck to paycheck, sometimes it doesnt seem like anything has gotten any better, even though inflation may have decreased, she said.
Thats largely because key monthly costs for most Americans - shelter, food, health care, electricity - are outpacing inflation. Rents are up 3.8 percent - the largest increase since 2011 - the Census Bureau reported last week, and roughly half of all renters spend more than the recommended 30 percent of their incomes to cover the cost. Utility prices have spiked, according to the consumer price index, with natural gas and electricity bills rising 13.8 and 6.2 percent, respectively, since last year. And though President Donald Trump promised to lower food costs during the presidential campaign, grocery prices just posted their biggest increase since 2022, due in large part to his tariffs.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/electricity-rent-monthly-bills-tipping-133007289.html

Norrrm
(3,047 posts)dalton99a
(90,425 posts)
newdeal2
(4,227 posts)progree
(12,365 posts)Last edited Tue Sep 23, 2025, 01:37 AM - Edit history (2)
It's the year-over-year number (Aug 2025 over August 2024). It's the cumulative increase over the last 12 months.
What people are feeling now is current or recent inflation, which is an upturn from musty old numbers:
The CPI (consumer price index) rise averaged 3.5% over the past 3 months on an annualized basis (core CPI: 3.6%)
The August one month increase annualized is: CPI: 4.7%, (core CPI: 4.2%)
More from where the graphs came from: https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143528031#post12
Yes Virginia, we have a rising inflation problem. It's not May anymore. And it sure as hell isn't 2.9% lately. That's a year-over-year number, the cumulative increase of the last 12 months.
Legitimacy of emphasizing and annualizing the last 3 months -- As the primary GDP measure in its quarterly GDP reports, The Dept of Commerce has for decades headlined the quarterly increase in GDP, annualized. So my emphasis on the last 3 months of consumer price data, annualized, is not a fringe ring-ring-ring-a-ding-dong idea.
https://www.bea.gov/news/2025/gross-domestic-product-2nd-quarter-2025-second-estimate-and-corporate-profits-preliminary