US Consumer Prices Tick Up As Rental Costs Rise
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rising food costs and higher rents offset a drop in gas prices last month, leaving consumer prices only slightly higher in October compared with the previous month.
The Labor Department says the consumer price index rose a seasonally adjusted 0.1 percent in October, down from sharp gains of 0.6 percent in the previous two months. In the past year, prices increased 2.2 percent. That's just above the Federal Reserve's inflation target of 2 percent.
The cost of shelter, which includes rents, rose 0.3 percent, the most in more than four years. Clothes and airline fares also rose, while the price of new and used cars fell.
Food prices rose 0.2 percent, while gas fell 0.6 percent. Excluding the volatile food and gas categories, core prices increased 0.2 percent.
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