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    Home»World Economy»Inflation Was Already Rising Before The War – Now The Real Surge Begins
    World Economy

    Inflation Was Already Rising Before The War – Now The Real Surge Begins

    Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteBy Team_Benjamin Franklin InstituteApril 10, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures index, rose 0.4% in February alone and is now running at 2.8% annually, while core inflation, which strips out food and energy, is still sitting at 3.0%. That is not progress. That is stagnation well above the Fed’s 2% target, and it is taking place before the energy crisis fully feeds through the system.

    The key point here is that inflation is no longer being driven by a single factor, it is embedded across multiple categories, and that is what makes it dangerous. When you break down where prices are rising, you begin to see the real story. Housing, which remains the largest component of inflation, is still increasing at roughly 3% annually, showing that rent and ownership costs are not coming down in any meaningful way. Medical care costs are up around 3.4%, indicating that healthcare costs continue to rise regardless of economic conditions. Household furnishings and operations are increasing by nearly 3.9%, reflecting ongoing cost pressures on goods tied to supply chains. Personal care is running even hotter at roughly 4.5%, which shows inflation is filtering into everyday essentials.

    Even the so-called “cooling” areas are misleading. Recreation is still rising above 2%, and services inflation remains persistent because wages and labor costs have not declined. When you look at transportation, airline fares rose 1.4% in February alone, and that is before jet fuel prices fully reflect the disruption in the Middle East. Healthcare services increased 0.5% in a single month, and hotel prices jumped 1.1%, showing that service inflation is not easing in any meaningful way.

    Food is another category where the public is feeling the pressure directly. Meat prices are up significantly, with beef and veal rising over 14% year-over-year, while fruits and vegetables are also climbing. Gasoline already rose 0.8% in February and has surged sharply since the war began, which means the next inflation print will look dramatically different. This is the key point that the mainstream refuses to address: the February data does not yet reflect the energy shock that is now unfolding.

    Personal income actually declined by 0.1% in February, while spending increased by 0.5%, which means consumers are now relying on savings or debt to maintain their lifestyle. That is not sustainable. It is the classic late-stage cycle behavior where inflation erodes purchasing power while consumption is artificially maintained.

    Energy sits at the base of the entire economy, and with the disruption in global oil flows, every category you are already seeing rise will be pushed higher. Transportation costs feed into food. Energy feeds into manufacturing. Shipping feeds into goods. Once energy rises, everything rises.

    The Federal Reserve is trapped in this environment because inflation is not collapsing fast enough to justify rate cuts, yet the economy is showing signs of weakness. Growth has already been revised lower, and the economy is running on an increasingly fragile footing. This is the classic setup for stagflation, where inflation remains elevated while economic growth slows.

    The real issue is that people are looking at the 3.0% core inflation number and assuming the situation is stabilizing, when in reality, that number is backward-looking. It reflects conditions before the geopolitical shock, before energy prices surged, and before supply chains were disrupted again. The next phase of inflation has already been set in motion, it just has not fully arrived in the data yet.

    This is exactly how these cycles unfold. First, inflation appears to stabilize. Then a new external shock emerges, in this case energy. That shock feeds into the system with a lag. By the time it becomes visible in the data, it is already too late to respond effectively.

    The bottom line is that inflation is not going away. It is shifting, spreading across categories, and preparing to accelerate again as energy flows through the system. The February report was not a sign of relief. It was the calm before the next wave.



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