Current:Home > MarketsInflation rankings flip: Northeast has largest price jumps, South and West cool off-VaTradeCoin
Inflation rankings flip: Northeast has largest price jumps, South and West cool off
View Date:2025-01-07 13:12:52
The nation’s regional inflation rankings have turned upside down.
For years, inflation has been higher in the South and West because Americans flocked to those areas for their temperate climates and lower costs, driving strong consumer demand and higher prices.
That trend was amplified by the pandemic. As remote work spread, many people streamed out of densely populated Northeastern and Midwestern cities like New York and Chicago for less costly areas with lots of open spaces, like Tennessee's Nashville and Idaho's Boise.
But the pecking order has reshuffled.
What area has the highest inflation?
In June, the Northeast had the country’s highest annual inflation at 3.8%, up from 2.5% in January, according to the Labor Department’s consumer price index. Meanwhile, inflation has dipped below 3% in both the South and West. Since early in the year, 12-month price increases have slowed from 3.4% to 2.9% in the South and from 3.3% to 2.8% in the West.
Protect your assets: Best high-yield savings accounts of 2023
Massachusetts, for instance, was saddled with the highest inflation among the 50 states last month at nearly 4%, according to Moody's Analytics estimates based on Labor Department data. Early this year it had the seventh lowest at 2.2%. Meanwhile, Florida is in the middle of the pack with 3% inflation after taking the No. 1 spot in early 2024 at 3.9%.
The Midwest has remained fairly stable, with inflation edging down from 2.7% in January to 2.5% last month, lowest among the four regions. And the U.S. overall has seen yearly inflation inch down from 3.1% to 3% as a spike early in the year was followed by a recent cooldown.
The turnabout among the regions largely has been fueled by a a spike in Northeastern housing costs, a fading pandemic and an immigration surge that has disproportionately affected that large cities in the region, said Moody's regional economist Adam Kamins.
“Some of what we’re seeing is makeup” economic and price gains following the health crisis, Kamins said. “The Northeast…is bouncing back."
Cumulatively, since the inflation run-up began in 2021, consumer prices are still up more dramatically in the South and West than the Northeast and that’s probably how most Americans feel the cost changes, Kamins notes. Still, the annual inflation numbers reflect the more recent trend captured by government reports and news headlines.
Also, keep in mind that on a monthly basis, inflation has continued to ease in all four regions. But the downshift has been slower in some areas than others. In the Northeast, for example, average consumer prices rose 0.4% in May and 0.3% in June, compared to increases of 0.1% and zero in the South.
Are rents still rising and pumping up inflation?
A big part of the story is housing. As Americans converged on the South and West, developers rushed to put up new houses and apartments, providing landlords less leverage to hike rents, Kamins said. Far fewer housing units have been built in the Northeast, he said, both because the region has lost residents and there’s less available land.
“New York, Boston and other metro areas with slower job and population growth are not seeing the new inventory growth in housing,” said Barbara Denham, senior economist at Oxford Economics.
In January 2022, average housing costs, including rent, were up 6.4% annually in the South Atlantic (which includes the Carolinas, Georgia and Florida) and 5.2% in New England, according to Moody’s and Labor figures. Last month, housing costs were up 6.4% in New England and 4.3% in the South Atlantic.
Is immigration to the US increasing or decreasing?
The U.S. also is experiencing a historic immigration surge. An estimated 3.3 million migrants will enter the country this year, up from an average of about 900,000 the decade before COVID, according to the Congressional Budget Office. Many are settling in large Northeastern cities such as New York, Boston and Philadelphia, Kamins says, helping push up housing costs and stoking demand and prices for other products and services.
That means a more vibrant economy and more jobs, as well as higher costs.
Are people moving back to big cities?
More broadly, the Northeast is still losing residents to the South and West but the losses have diminished as the pandemic has eased. Many residents, companies and tourists have returned to downtown districts in New York and other large cities, putting upward pressure on economic activity and prices, especially for activities such as dining out.
At the same time, more businesses have come back to those cities than workers, creating labor shortages that have nudged wages higher – a cost that’s typically passed on to consumers through higher prices. Although the share of job openings and pay increases in the South still outpace those in the Northeast, the gap between the two regions has narrowed, Labor Department figures show.
Millennials favor real estate, cryptoWealthy millennials are rejecting stocks for 'alternative' investments. What are they?
Are car prices dropping?
Still another factor is car prices. They shot up early in the pandemic because of supply-chain bottlenecks but have since fallen substantially as those snarls have resolved. Yet because fewer people buy cars in the public-transit dependent Northeast than in the South and West, they weren’t hit with as much of a price bump. Now they aren't seeing as large a decline.
"The changing geographic footprint (for inflation) ushers in a new phase, in which price pressures are abating more rapidly in areas that have been dealing with especially high inflation over the past couple of years," Kamins says.
veryGood! (37)
Related
- She was found dead while hitchhiking in 1974. An arrest has finally been made.
- Falls off US-Mexico border wall in San Diego injure 11 in one day, 10 are hospitalized
- Jack Teixeira pleads guilty to leaking hundreds of highly classified Pentagon documents
- Joshua Jackson and Lupita Nyong'o Confirm Romance With PDA-Filled Tropical Getaway
- Worker trapped under rubble after construction accident in Kentucky
- More than 10,000 players will be in EA Sports College Football 25 video game
- The Supreme Court’s Social Media Case Has Big Implications for Climate Disinformation, Experts Warn
- Boy whose death led to charges against parents and grandmother suffered ongoing abuse, autopsy shows
- Georgia remains part of College Football Playoff bracket projection despite loss
- Ashley Tisdale Reveals How Her 2-Year-Old Daughter Was Mistakenly Taught the F-Word
Ranking
- John Krasinski is People's Sexiest Man Alive. What that says about us.
- Falls off US-Mexico border wall in San Diego injure 11 in one day, 10 are hospitalized
- The owners of a Christian boarding school in Missouri are jailed and charged with kidnapping crimes
- Elle King returns to performing nearly 2 months after controversial Dolly Parton tribute
- Exclusive Yankee Candle Sale: 50% Off Holiday Candles for a Limited Time
- Denver Broncos inform QB Russell Wilson they’ll release him when new league year begins
- Mining company can’t tap water needed for Okefenokee wildlife refuge, US says
- NFL free agency: When does it start? What is legal tampering period?
Recommendation
-
Why have wildfires been erupting across the East Coast this fall?
-
New Mexico governor signs bill that bans some guns at polls and extends waiting period to 7 days
-
Caitlin Clark is among college basketball's greats, with or without an NCAA title
-
What does 'shipping' mean? Unpacking the romance-focused internet slang
-
Military veteran gets time served for making ricin out of ‘curiosity’
-
2024 NFL mock draft: Six QBs land in top 16 picks of post-combine shake-up
-
Biden approves disaster declaration for areas of Vermont hit by December flooding, severe storm
-
Noah Cyrus Frees the Nipple During Paris Fashion Week Outing With Fiancé Pinkus