...but inflation won't happen right away. They have all their fingers in the dam. This "Normalizing" sounds peculiar. Quantitative easing is more like quantitative pleasing of the electorate in time for elections. Looks like energy could be the achilles heal...
Prepare yourself for a sum mertime inflation shock.
An expert who helps put together the government's Consumer Price Index (CPI) says that the closely-watch inflation gauge could rise abnormally "after June."
In a phone conversation I had soon after a 0.4 percent increase in consumer prices for April was announced last week, this expert -- who I can't name -- confirmed that the CPI is again understating energy prices.
And, again, the computers at the Bureau of Labor Statistics, which collect this data, will correct that mistake in the next few months.
That 0.4 percent overall increase in April included a seasonally adjusted 3.3 percent jump in the price of gasoline. But before that adjustment, the CPI really showed gasoline inflation more than twice as bad with an increase of 7.5 percent.
The same thing happened in March. The government seasonally adjusted the increase in gasoline down to 5.6 percent when, unadjusted, it was really 11.7 percent.