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Inflation

Americans Want Lower Costs, but Inflation Just Hit Its Highest Mark Since January

Inflation hit its highest level since January, with prices rising 0.4 percent in August.

Eric Boehm | 9.11.2025 10:30 AM

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People shopping in a grocery store | Photo by Frankie Cordoba on Unsplash
(Photo by Frankie Cordoba on Unsplash)

The popular narrative says Americans don't agree about very much in their politics these days—but recent polling shows there's at least one thing that a big, cross-partisan majority wants the government to deliver: a lower cost of living.

That's most striking in a survey published last week by the Economic Innovation Group. In response to a question about what public officials should prioritize to make life better for American workers, the overwhelming response was "reduce the cost of everyday essentials." When combined with their second choice—making housing more affordable—a full 65 percent of the American electorate wants to see politicians tackle rising costs. That's true across the political spectrum, with nearly identical numbers from those who voted for President Donald Trump in 2024 and those who voted for Kamala Harris.

But you can't always get what you want—and in politics that is even more true than in most parts of life.

Inflation hit its highest annualized level since January by rising to 2.9 percent in August, according to consumer price data released Thursday by the Department of Labor. In the past month, prices climbed by 0.4 percent, the highest month-over-month increase since December 2024.

The increase was an expected one—and had been foreshadowed by sharply rising prices in the wholesale market last month. Even so, it is not a welcome signal alongside a labor market that's struggling and amid Trump's pressure campaign aimed at getting the Federal Reserve to lower interest rates (which could push inflation higher still, or trigger so-called "stagflation").

The consumer price index showed that rising prices in August hit all levels of what voters might consider "everyday essentials." Food prices climbed by 0.5 percent, while energy prices shot up by 0.7 percent. Clothing (up 0.5 percent), new and used vehicles (up 0.3 percent and 1 percent, respectively), and shelter (up 0.4 percent) all climbed as well.

It's impossible to ignore the fact that those price increases coincided with the month that many of Trump's long-threatened "reciprocal" tariffs finally took effect after long delays.

"Recent months making clear that tariffs are materially weighing on consumer prices," Ernie Tedeschi, director of economics for the Yale Budget Lab, posted on Twitter.

The middle-class squeeze from tariffs is here. Inflation hit 2.9% in August, the highest since January and up from 2.3% in April. It's troubling that so many basic necessities are rising in price again: Food, gas, clothing and shelter all had big cost jumps in August. And this is… pic.twitter.com/uJrSb8jx2z

— Heather Long (@byHeatherLong) September 11, 2025

Defenders of Trump's tariff policies have argued that they won't show up as inflation, since tariffs increase prices via fiscal policy (that is, as tax increases) rather than as monetary policy (which is what inflation tracks).

That may not be much of a defense at this point. Indeed, if that's true, then things look worse for Trump, who is now presiding over increasing inflation and tariff-related price increases that go above and beyond what's seen in the latest consumer price data.

Regardless of which perspective you believe on the economic side of things, it is now obvious that rising prices are a political problem for the Trump administration—and that Trump's favorite policy is making that problem worse.

Go back to that survey from the Economic Innovation Group that found a clear majority of Americans asking their political leaders to lower the cost of living. In a follow-up question, respondents were asked what they thought politicians should do to accomplish that goal. One of the offered responses was "raising tariffs on imported goods." It polled dead last among both the Trump-voting cohort and the Harris-voting one.

The question that remains: Is the White House listening?

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NEXT: Charlie Kirk Assassinated

Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

InflationFree TradeTariffsEconomyTrump AdministrationPollsEconomicsPolitics
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  1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   5 hours ago

    found a clear majority of Americans asking their political leaders to lower the cost of living.

    LOL.

    Log in to Reply
    1. charliehall   4 hours ago

      We voted for the opposite.

      Log in to Reply
  2. Stupid Government Tricks   5 hours ago

    Midterm elections usually go against the incumbent President, and the margins are slim to start with. On the other hand, the Democrats seem to be going out of their way to be worse than in 2024. On the gripping hand, voters remembered Biden/Harris 2023 inflation 18 months later in 2024, and I doubt they'll forget this inflation in 2026. On the forked hand, Trump's pulled a rabbit out of a MAGA hat before. On the coiled hand, he didn't in 2020.

    But he's sure not doing himself any favors. Economic ignorance bites back.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 hours ago

      Yeah, TDS-addled shits like this are whining about 2.8% inflation.

      Log in to Reply
  3. Chumby   5 hours ago

    EB;dr

    Log in to Reply
  4. JesseAz (RIP CK)   4 hours ago

    Fuck off Eric. The annualized rate of this number is 2.8%. Lower than any point under Joe.

    Meanwhile, actual analysis.

    PPI dropped yet again.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/producer-prices-unexpectedly-dropped-august-yoy-inflation-tumbles

    You know the people actually getting items from supply chains.

    Mainstream optimism is up.

    https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/main-street-optimism-ticks-higher-tariff-inflation-expectations-tumble

    Stronger sales expectations led the improvement, with a net 12% of owners anticipating higher real sales volumes. This represents a six-point jump from July.

    Business health improved as 68% of owners rated conditions “good” or “excellent.”

    Profit trends notched their best level since March 2023, while fewer firms raised prices, and financing costs eased. The average short-term loan rate fell to 8.1%, the lowest since May 2023, providing some relief for Main Street borrowers.

    On the brighter side, the much feared impact of Trump's tariffs appears to be evaporating rapidly as fewer and fewer small businesses plan price hikes in the next three months...

    You need to get off the economics beat. Youre a fucking idiot.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Keldonric   34 minutes ago

      If I’m reading the charts right, headline PPI slipped because trade margins fell 1.7% and energy was down 0.4% — both pretty volatile. Strip those out and the core index still rose 0.3%, the fourth month in a row it’s moved higher. Worth noting the trade piece measures retailer/wholesaler margins, not the underlying goods costs, I guess which is why it swings so sharply.

      Log in to Reply
      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   23 minutes ago

        Yes. Energy is down. This is how the economy works. Multiple variables effecting the whole. Meanwhile Eric keeps pretending all thingd are static except tariffs which he blames for everything.

        Log in to Reply
  5. sarcasmic   4 hours ago

    Numbers and surveys that make Trump look bad are all leftist. Everything is fine. Best economy ever. Taxes are going to make us rich!

    Log in to Reply
    1. Idaho-Bob   3 hours ago

      Fabricated numbers and gaslighting.
      You intentionally omitted these facts.

      Log in to Reply
      1. sarcasmic   3 hours ago

        Yes. Anything that makes Trump look bad is fabricated. How do we know this? Because Trump is political Jesus and can do no wrong. Begging the question for the win!

        Seriously though, is there a fallacy that you won’t fellate in the name of Trump? Your ability to ignore your gag reflex is truly astounding.

        Log in to Reply
  6. Sir Chips Alot   4 hours ago

    If Americans truly wanted lower costs of living, they would never ever vote for a Democrat

    Log in to Reply
    1. sarcasmic   3 hours ago

      You mean the lifelong Democrat who ran as a Republican in 2016?

      Log in to Reply
  7. SRG2   3 hours ago

    Reality: DR

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   3 hours ago

      What is reality shrike?

      Log in to Reply
      1. Chumby   2 hours ago

        Reality is that shrike had his original account banned for posting a link to child pornography.

        Log in to Reply
        1. SRG2   1 hour ago

          Thar may well be true. But as I'm not shrike, so what?

          Log in to Reply
  8. TJJ2000   3 hours ago

    OMG! Since January??? The Highest ever in the last 8 months!
    We're all going to DIE! /s

    Sometimes 'alarmism' propaganda is the only point that exists.

    Log in to Reply
    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   3 hours ago

      Because this argument of EB is pure propaganda. He has quadrupled down on his narrative and by god he will never change it.

      Log in to Reply
  9. Dillinger   3 hours ago

    lol read the room.

    Log in to Reply
  10. Longtobefree   3 hours ago

    "They" SAY "they" want lower prices, but "they" keep voting for democrats.

    Log in to Reply
  11. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   3 hours ago

    "US economy grows 3.3% in second quarter, government says, in second estimate of April-June growth"

    Stuff your TDS up your ass, Boehm; your head needs some company.

    Log in to Reply
  12. Truthteller1   2 hours ago

    Boehm is an idiot and that number doesn't mean what he wants it to mean.

    Log in to Reply

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