Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Inflation: Low by the numbers, but still a big public concern

inflation-problem

When the Consumer Price Index for July is released later this morning, it’s likely to show a fairly modest increase: 0.2% is the consensus forecast among Wall Street economists, according to Bloomberg News. Inflation has been running at or below an annual rate of 2% for most of the past year — quite low by recent standards.

Nonetheless, about half (51%) of Americans called rising prices a “very big problem” in this spring’s 39-nation survey by the Pew Research Center. Nearly a third more (31%) said inflation was a “moderately” big problem. Concern about rising prices was particularly acute among people making less than $30,000 a year (59% of that group called it a “very big” problem), people with no college education (60%) and African Americans (61%).

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Around the world, people express high levels of concern about rising prices, regardless of the actual level of inflation their national economies may be experiencing. That was true of every one of the 39 publics surveyed this spring: The percentage saying rising prices were a “very” or “moderately” big problem in their countries ranged from 73% in Germany to 100% in Pakistan, Greece and Lebanon.