Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 28
Warsh’s Preferred Inflation Gauge Cools to 2.3% as Core PCE Hits 3.3%
Updated
Updated · Reuters · May 28

Warsh’s Preferred Inflation Gauge Cools to 2.3% as Core PCE Hits 3.3%

2 articles · Updated · Reuters · May 28

Summary

  • Dallas Fed trimmed mean inflation slowed to 2.3% in April from 2.4%, reinforcing Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s view that price pressures are easing.
  • Dallas Fed economist Tyler Atkinson said the gauge is likely understating inflation because Trump-era tariffs lifted prices across a broad swath of goods, reversing the measure’s usual statistical skew.
  • Core PCE inflation instead rose 3.3% year over year in April—the fastest since 2023—backing policymakers such as Lisa Cook who say inflation is moving the wrong way.
  • Warsh told lawmakers last month he prefers trimmed-average measures, but analysts warned the Dallas gauge also gave a false cool signal during the post-pandemic inflation surge.
  • Dallas Fed does not plan to change the methodology, saying the distortion should fade if tariff-driven price pressures recede in coming months.

Insights

With key inflation gauges diverging, which economic reality will the Federal Reserve choose to follow?
Are American households and the Fed living in two different economic realities as experts debate inflation?