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According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the headline figure for the Consumer Price Index was at 2.4% year-over-year, up from 2.3% in April but lower than the expected 2.5% growth.
UNSW Economics Professor Gigi Foster discusses what a consumer price index of 2.1 per cent means for Australians.
Senior Analyst Pablo Piovano from FXStreet pointed out that the Canadian Dollar has surrendered part of its recent gains, ...
The Consumer Price Index rose 2.4 percent in May, from a year earlier, a reading that reflects only the initial impact of President Trump’s tariffs. By Colby Smith . U.S.
CPI report shows that President Trump's whipsaw tariff policies have not had an outsized impact on inflation, but economists remain on guard.
Consumer prices showed little sign of tariff-related increases for the third month in a row, defying expectations of a ...
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