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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.
Senior Analyst Pablo Piovano from FXStreet pointed out that the Canadian Dollar has surrendered part of its recent gains, ...
UNSW Economics Professor Gigi Foster discusses what a consumer price index of 2.1 per cent means for Australians.
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.
The revamped Consumer Price Index (CPI), set to launch in February-March 2026, will include item-level data for both rural ...
CPI report shows that President Trump's whipsaw tariff policies have not had an outsized impact on inflation, but economists remain on guard.