- The Washington Times - Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Consumer prices rose in April but not as badly as expected, according to a federal inflation report Tuesday that shows President Trump’s tariffs have not taken a major toll on prices so far.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the consumer price index rose 0.2% in April for an annual rate of 2.3%, putting it slightly below Wall Street predictions.

Shelter costs rose 0.3%, accounting for more than half of the all-items increase. Energy costs also increased, with upticks in the natural gas index and the electricity index offsetting a decline in the gasoline index.



The cost of household furnishings, medical care, motor vehicle insurance and education rose, though food costs declined 0.1% in April, the report said.

Food costs, however, declined 0.1% in April.

The overall increase was a reversal from March, when prices fell 0.1%.


SEE ALSO: Trump expects China to strike wider trade pact, says ‘they want it very badly’


The path forward is uncertain because Mr. Trump imposed blanket tariffs on imports at the start of April.

Economists say the added cost of tariffs will eventually be passed along to consumers. However, retailers got ahead of the tariffs by increasing imports, and the U.S. and China struck a weekend truce that brought them back from the brink of a debilitating trade war.

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U.S.-China talks slashed sky-high tariffs that exceeded 100% from both countries, with China now imposing a 10% levy on American goods while Chinese products face a 30% tariff when they enter the U.S.

The White House also slashed the tariff on low-value “de minimis” shipments from China to U.S. buyers from 120% to 54%.

Mr. Trump has imposed a 10% tariff on all imports and 25% tariffs on such as steel, aluminum and automobile imports.

For now, the lower-than-expected inflation report is likely to fuel Mr. Trump’s calls on the Federal Reserve to slash interest rates. 

The president says the central bank, which has stood pat on rates, must act to ease the nation’s transition under his economic plan.

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The White House boasted that Tuesday’s reading was the lowest annual rate of inflation since 2021. Rampant inflation dogged the Biden administration for four years.

“The CPI report shows that the American people are experiencing real economic relief: grocery, gas, and egg prices are down, while real wages are up,” White House spokesman Kush Desai said. “President Trump’s America First policies created a historic economy in his first term, and he’s laying the groundwork to repeat the success in his second term.”

The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded in negative territory Tuesday, dragged down by a key health care stock, though the S&P 500 climbed into positive territory for the year.

Democrats, meanwhile, said they remain worried about a recession later this year. They are working to strip Mr. Trump of his unilateral authority to impose tariffs.

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House Democrats signed a brief in support of blue states that sued over Mr. Trump’s use of a 1977 law to impose the tariffs, saying his blanket levies went around Congress.

Mr. Trump has “imposed and backed away from his reckless tariffs and tax increases on multiple occasions, each time without authorization from Congress,” House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, New York Democrat, said. “This is unlawful, and it is unleashing harm on hardworking American taxpayers.”

• Tom Howell Jr. can be reached at thowell@washingtontimes.com.

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