Yves here. While this article makes some useful observations, it also serves as yet another reminder of the blinkered view most analysts and commentators are talking to the accelerating Strait of Hormuz supply shock. Too many are still seeing it as primarily an energy price shock. First, as commodities maven Jeff Currie has stressed, oil and gas may be less important energy sources relative to GDP than in the 1970s, but their overall importance is much more important due to how many other petroleum-derived products are essential to the economy. We won’t see the full effect on food costs start to kick in until harvest time. And even then, as with oil, there are some large grain reserves, so that will blunt the front end of that supply loss.
It is also revealing, and in a bad way, to see how much attention this article devotes to the Fed, which can address a supply shock only by killing the economy stone cold dead with rate hikes, and not by Federal and state action to try to get businesses to reduce waste and inefficiency and to ascertain which uses of limited output deserve high priority. Mind you, they won’t be able to solve a problem this large, but they can reduce the damage.
By D. Brian Blank, Associate Professor of Finance, Mississippi State University, and Brandy Hadley, Associate Professor of Finance and Distinguished Scholar of Applied Investments, Appalachian State University. Originally published at The Conversation
Americans don’t need a press release to know that inflation is rising. Gasoline is above $4 per gallon amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and the release of key price data on May 28, 2026, underscores why policymakers are worried these pressures could spread into the broader economy.
The report offered a mixed but still uncomfortable picture. The month-to-month rise was softer than expected, but the change year over year still points to concern: a 3.8% jump from a year earlier, the fastest pace since 2021, and a less volatile index that excludes food and energy up 3.3%.
This increase suggests inflation isn’t limited to gasoline. Housing, utilities and recreational spending are also keeping underlying inflation elevated, even as other data shows a slowing economy and weaker income growth.
As finance and applied investments professors who study how businesses make decisions amid uncertainty, we have been watching this tension build. In our 2026 economic outlook, we warned that recession fears could persist alongside rising prices. Fresh inflation data now suggests the challenge may be deeper and longer lasting than many expected.
Are All Prices Rising?
The fresh inflation data comes from the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, or headline PCE, which is maintained and released by the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis. Headline PCE had already been getting hotter, rising to 3.5% year on year in March 2026, up from 2.8% in February. But an even more important metric for the Federal Reserve is core PCE, which excludes the more volatile categories of food and energy. Core PCE matters because it gives policymakers a clearer read on underlying inflation pressures and is generally considered a better predictor of where inflation is headed, the Fed’s chief concern. That has been rising this year as well.
The key question isn’t simply whether gas prices are rising, but whether those higher energy costs are spreading into the rest of the economy.
That’s why energy costs are both a measure of current inflation and a signal of future rising prices. They show up directly in inflation data like PCE but also affect shipping, airline fares, food production, utilities, packaging, business profit margins and consumer psychology. A one-time bump doesn’t necessarily create lasting inflation. But the risk increases when those higher costs pass through to the broader economy and people begin to expect inflation to remain high. For example, if workers believe costs will be higher in general, they might demand higher wages, which in turn can make inflation even hotter.
There’s already some evidence that the inflationary effect of energy prices is spreading. April’s Consumer Price Index report – another inflation gauge – showed a 3.8% leap, the fastest in three years, with energy prices up 18% and spending on airlines up over 20%, while grocery prices posted their largest monthly gain since 2022. Tariff-sensitive categories like apparel and household furnishings are also still climbing.
And it’s these costs, not core PCE, that households experience every day. Americans buy gas, pay utility bills, purchase groceries and start changing their spending behavior in response to these pressures. That’s why the Fed is watching to see how energy prices impact other measures of inflation.
What’s the Fed To Do?
Kevin Warsh has just been sworn in as the new chair of the central bank, which means the next meeting of the Fed’s policymaking committee on June 16-17, 2026, will be his first in that role. He’ll face an unusual amount of disagreement among committee members as well as scrutiny over his own positions given his rhetorical shifts on inflation and Fed policy since he was nominated by President Donald Trump. The president has pressured the Fed to cut rates, while Warsh has recently downplayed the significance and accuracy of the PCE gauge.
The Fed’s tool for responding to inflation is to raise interest rates, but it’s not always straightforward. The Fed doesn’t just hike interest rates as a direct response to inflation. If the increase in energy prices looks temporary and inflation expectations remain “anchored” – that is, stable among consumers – the Fed may hold steady on rates or even cut them as consumers continue to dial back spending. But it may have to keep rates higher for longer or even consider additional tightening if those conditions don’t hold and inflation continues rising.
This creates a problem for the Fed’s “dual mandate” to control inflation while supporting economic growth. Higher gas prices are inflationary, but they also reduce households’ spending power and dampen growth. In that sense, higher energy prices can act like a tax on consumers: People spend more to drive, heat and cool their homes, and receive goods, leaving less income for restaurants, travel, retail and other purchases.
That’s why the Fed doesn’t have a simple answer. If it hikes interest rates to combat inflation, it still won’t resolve geopolitical conflict and increase global oil supplies. But it can reduce demand and slow inflation.
Indeed, according to notes of the most recent Fed policy committee meeting in April, many officials are increasingly concerned that persistent inflation could require additional rate hikes. While the Fed decided to hold rates steady at 3.50% to 3.75% at the time, committee members noted that inflation remains elevated, “in part reflecting the recent increase in global energy prices.”
Another factor: Long-term yields on Treasury bonds, which reflect what investors demand for buying U.S. debt, have reached their highest levels since 2007. That could be a sign that markets expect higher rates or more uncertainty – and it matters because yields influence mortgage rates, business borrowing costs and the value of retirement portfolios, to name a few examples. In other words, inflation concerns don’t have to wait for another Fed rate hike to affect the economy. If markets believe inflation will stay elevated, borrowing costs can rise on their own.
What To Watch at the Fed’s June Meeting
The leadership transition at the Fed makes this moment particularly noteworthy. Warsh’s first major challenge may not be whether to raise or cut rates immediately, but how to explain what the Fed is watching. Will he emphasize headline inflation, core inflation, other inflation measures, consumer expectations, financial conditions or signs of slowing demand? This is especially important, as some of these gauges are closer to 2% and rising more slowly while others rise more rapidly away from the Fed’s 2% target.
Artificial intelligence adds another complication. AI-related investment may be helping hold up growth even as households feel pressured by higher gas and grocery prices. That creates a divided economy: Consumers struggle with higher prices and borrowing costs, but AI-related investment supports markets, infrastructure spending and business optimism. For his part, Warsh argues that AI also will help drive down prices, allowing the Fed to cut rates sooner.
All of this makes the inflation outlook hard to read. Weakening consumer demand and wage growth argues for caution, while rising inflation expectations and businesses passing on higher costs to consumers and the broader economy argue for higher rates.
Ultimately, the key question for the Fed is not simply whether inflation is rising, but whether energy prices are reopening the inflation fight at the exact moment it’s trying to prove that price stability is still within reach. Warsh’s first months as chair will test whether the Fed can maintain inflation credibility while avoiding unnecessary damage to an already pressured consumer economy.


Don’t the “Official” Economists read their general history? Many revolutions were prompted by “food insecurity” (ie. starvation,) among the general population. To remove “food” and “energy” costs from the main measure of inflation seems downright perverse.
As our hostess mentioned, crop yields are a lagging indicator. By fall, the damage will have already been done. What shape is the FDA in today after DOGE has had its lascivious way with her? I am old enough to remember the FDA surplus food giveaways to the poor and downtrodden masses. Today? The surplus that supplied those exercises in crisis management is going away.
Expect “calls” for major realignment of government policy by next spring. If the Trump Team handles that problem as efficiently as it has handled the Persian Gulf “problem,” expect “civil distress” on a large scale.
Stay safe.
By fall, the damage will have already been done.
Assume a broccoli.
I don’t get why the Fed is seen as a solution to this. They can’t print barrels of oil. Squashing housing and autos doesn’t reduce demand for oil.
This just makes the problem worse.
Yep, the only thing they can do in this scenario is try to crush demand, which they very well may do. We will see.
It’s a pretense that eliminating demand solves a shortage problem simply because the price doesn’t increase. It’s a bit like solving the problem of not enough antibiotics by killing patients.
Word from here on the ground in Main Street – I’m retired on a fixed income in a Midwest US city.
I’ve been talking with my daughter who is mostly left Democrat and doesn’t read the news at all.
We are both agreed that we have been in recession with out of control inflation for at least a year now. Retail sales are shrinking and people have been cutting back for months – I know I have been. This is accelerating and we seem to be tipping into depression.
Not in the future. It is already happening now, and has been for months.
If we’re effectively in borderline depression now we need a new word for whatever hits this summer.
Ohio here. I can see it here too. Small town USA. Gas around $4.50. Everything is slowing down. Less traffic. Stores aren’t as busy. I also talk to people who work in retail and they tell me this is true. The slowdown is for real. Another indicator is a tavern who’s known for their food and drink. Bartenders tell me it has been slowing down and has for months now.
Since we are a small town so many commute to work. Many 20+ miles. $4.50 gas is eating their discretionary spending. It’s also hitting the stores with higher prices. Everyone is complaining about the trip to the grocery.
From what I read from our economic numbers/indicators this is widespread and without question.
Buckle up – it might be an interesting summer.
I agree, but it is not possible to be “left” and “Democrat” at the same time. The Ds are just like the Rs (called the Uniparty): Zionist, Israel First, pro-oligarchy, pro-war, pro neoliberal austerity (kleptocracy), anti-labor, and corrupt to the core. There is no way to vote against the interests of the oligarchy who has Congress bought and paid for.
…but it is not possible to be “left” and “Democrat” at the same time
Well, on a select few social issues, the democrat party is the leftish half of the right wing that constitutes our ruling class…
Or we can do as many “conservative” commentators have done, and that is to redefine what is “left” (aside from a pejorative from their POV) which is identical to what happened to “liberal.” God knows, I’ve met many self-described “liberals” who are some of the most bigoted, racist, and close-minded authoritarian boot-lickers to walk.
But that said, I have little doubt that the new FED Chair Kevin Warsh was selected by Trump to facilitate “The Great American Fire-Sale” and I fully expect his policies and decisions will result in max-pain for rank-and-file citizens as the looters sweep up anything they can grab: millions more hungry, homeless, desperate and scared while 1% make out like it’s Christmas Day, every day, until finally the wheels come off this scheme and their own houses start burning to the ground.
Absolutely second everything you have written. Great comment.
Living up here in the Upper Valley of Nh/Vt it is laughable the “celebrating diversity” nonsense that gets puked out. It’s all lovey dovey until a lefty gets challenged on their mantra of the moment.
Don’t get me started on the R’s, the few that are around.
As far as the 1% not caring until their own houses start burning down, problem is they have 2/3/4 more to go to somewhere else. Or even in another country. Exhibit A, Peter Theil.
I douibt that inflation by whatever indicator has onoly been 3.9% annually. The figures are rigged.
In 1973 the US had 212 million people and in 2025 it had about 342 million… around 130 million more. Not only that, they have pushed out into areas not lived in and therefore ambulance services, electricity lines and all the other things we must have now that luxuries have become necessities.
But more than just the population changed. The introduction of the “Just in Time” business model, consolidation of lots of businesses like grocery, hardware, agricultural production and the supply chains used to move things.
I really don’t know what to call things like assisted living situations for more well to do oldies, but is is a concentration of clients under a managed life. Also, what is something like “The Villages” in Florida? I know the residents probably own their home, but everything else is provided by whatever or whomever created the concept and then the reality of it.
Will all these changes worsen the impact of shortages?
This recent paper demonstrates the focus on oil commodities as the end-all-be-all source of inflation is misguided. Turns it there are plenty of other commodities (energy, metals, livestock, agriculture) that are equally capable at disrupting prices and production!
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5915682
Good thing so many of those are also being impacted the war in equally dramatic ways.
Brace for impact.