Consumer prices 'flat' along Wasatch Front

By Lois M. Collins and Martin Crutsinger

Deseret News and Associated Press

Published: Saturday, Feb. 21 2009 12:00 a.m. MST

"Flat" describes the Consumer Price Index along the Wasatch Front in January, according to data from Wells Fargo and U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics that was released Friday.

While the price of gasoline rose by around 30 cents a gallon, it was offset by slight drops in housing costs and grocery prices.

Costs in Utah attached to various indicators wiggled up and down some over the months, but compared to 11 months ago, there's no cumulative change.

Nationally, consumer prices rose modestly in January, propelled by higher energy costs, but economists said they remain more concerned about the threat of price declines throughout the economy. That's because even with last month's increase in consumer prices, inflation has been flat over the past year, the lowest reading in more than a half century.

Economists have grown more concerned about deflation in recent months as the severity of the recession, already the longest in a quarter-century, intensifies.

"We are having a massive asset-price deflation in terms of falling home prices and falling stock prices," said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight. "The Federal Reserve's worry should definitely still be deflation."

The Labor Department said Friday that consumer prices rose by 0.3 percent last month, the first increase since prices crept up 0.7 percent in July. Prices were flat in August and September, and then posted huge declines in the fourth quarter of last year.

The November plunge of 1.7 percent was the largest on government records going back 61 years. Prices fell by 0.8 percent in both December and October, the government said Friday.

While falling prices appeal to consumers, the Federal Reserve is on alert about the possibility of deflation, which can make a recession even worse by dragging down Americans' wages, and clobbering already-stricken home and stock prices. Dropping prices already are hurting businesses' profits, forcing them to slice capital investments and lay off workers.

Even with the 0.3 percent January increase, which was in line with economists' expectations, inflation for the 12 months ending in January was zero. That's the lowest reading since prices actually fell by 0.4 percent for a 12-month period ending in August 1955.

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