Business & Economy

On The Money: Consumer prices jumped 5 percent annually in May | GOP senators say bipartisan group has infrastructure deal

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THE BIG DEAL: Consumer prices jumped 5 percent annually in May

Consumer prices rose 5 percent in the 12 months leading up to May, a finding that was higher than expected and prompted some policymakers to renew their concerns about inflation.

The consumer price index (CPI), a closely watched gauge of inflation, rose at the fastest annual rate since 2008 as suppliers struggled to keep up with sharply rising demand, according to data released Thursday by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). 

What you need to know about the inflation data:

Read more here on the CPI numbers from The Hill’s Sylvan Lane.

Sylvan also wrote more here about the political challenges the numbers pose for Biden and the Federal Reserve.

 

LEADING THE DAY: GOP senators say bipartisan group has infrastructure deal

Republican senators who are negotiating within a bipartisan group of 10 senators say they have reached a tentative deal on the size of an infrastructure package and how to pay for it.

The emerging deal would spend only a fraction of the $4.1 trillion investment President Biden has called for and would not raise taxes, which could make it a tough sell within the broader Senate Democratic caucus. 

Members of the bipartisan group cautioned Thursday that the tentative deal still needs to be presented to the Senate Republican conference and the White House to see if there’s broader buy-in. 

“We have a tentative agreement on the pay-fors, yes, but that’s among the five Democrats and the five Republicans. It has not been taken to our respective caucuses or the White House so we’re in the middle of the process. We’re not at the end of the process, not at the beginning but we’re in the middle,” said Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), a member of the group.

The Hill’s Alexander Bolton has more here about the latest in the infrastructure talks.

 

Congress debates responses to gender pay gap

The Hill’s Jackson Walker reports: The Joint Economic Committee on Wednesday debated the potential effects of legislative responses to the gender pay gap, a day after Senate Republicans blocked a House-passed bill from advancing. Democrats argued that President Biden’s infrastructure plans would help industries where women make up much of the workforce, in addition to broadening out existing paid family and medical leave programs. Republicans countered that legislation could have unintended consequences and that there are other factors at play.

 

GOOD TO KNOW: 

 

OPINION: