Tariffs are showing up in core goods within CPI, says Brookings' Wendy Edelberg
December 18, 2025 • 4m 5s
? (Correspondent)
00:00.070
let's
bring
in
our
panel
joining
us
now
brookings
institution
economic
studies
senior
fellow
wendy
edelberg
and
american
institute
for
economic
research
monetary
economics
managing
director
lydia
mashburn
newman
welcome
to
you
both
wendy
i
mean
i
know
you
haven't
kind
of
been
? (Correspondent)
00:14.950
able
to
dig
into
the
guts
of
this
report
but
it
seems
like
a
pretty
benign
reading
how
do
you
feel
about
it
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
00:21.000
yeah
it's
frustrating
because
they
haven't
even
posted
the
information
that
i
would
need
to
to
really
parse
all
of
this
given
the
the
confusing
way
they've
displayed
the
information
but
the
the
the
important
number
is
the
year
over
year
change
in
the
prices
of
core
goods
and
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
00:38.190
that
was
one
point
four
percent
and
that
may
not
sound
like
a
lot
but
this
is
a
category
that
in
normal
times
has
negative
inflation
all
the
time
and
this
is
where
we're
seeing
tariffs
so
i
think
this
is
the
category
where
we
know
that
tariffs
are
having
in
some
ways
the
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
00:57.070
absolutely
expected
effect
on
inflation
? (Correspondent)
01:01.790
yeah
so
for
that
subcomponent
of
inflation
where
you
would
be
able
to
isolate
perhaps
the
tariff
effect
maybe
we
are
seeing
it
although
lydia
i
guess
not
necessarily
feeding
into
by
this
number
a
a
broader
lift
in
CPI
Lydia Mashburn Newman (Monetary Economics Managing Director)
01:17.060
the
headline
number
definitely
seems
to
be
a
step
in
the
right
direction
at
coming
in
at
two
point
seven
year
over
year
we
should
keep
in
mind
though
that
that's
on
some
higher
inflation
numbers
that
we
saw
with
the
federal
reserve
's
last
rate
hike
cycle
starting
at
the
end
of
Lydia Mashburn Newman (Monetary Economics Managing Director)
01:33.420
twenty
twenty
four
so
we
would
expect
this
these
upcoming
readings
from
november
and
then
december
and
january
and
february
to
look
a
little
bit
better
because
their
relative
year
ago
comparison
was
also
relatively
high
but
as
wendy
was
saying
those
good
services
prices
those
Lydia Mashburn Newman (Monetary Economics Managing Director)
01:50.470
goods
prices
rather
are
definitely
an
indicator
of
inflation
showing
up
in
tariffs
showing
up
in
inflation
and
what
we
still
need
to
keep
an
eye
out
on
services
inflation
while
we
have
seen
housing
come
down
a
little
bit
services
are
still
elevated
and
that
is
a
monetary
issue
Lydia Mashburn Newman (Monetary Economics Managing Director)
02:08.870
that
is
related
to
the
fed
's
monetary
policy
and
so
we're
still
we
do
still
have
some
pent
up
price
pressures
from
both
the
feds
last
rate
cutting
cycle
last
year
and
even
some
overhang
or
maybe
hangover
from
their
post
covid
policies
? (Correspondent)
02:25.590
wendy
given
that
we
are
able
to
you
know
identify
perhaps
this
tariff
effect
in
court
goods
what
does
it
mean
on
a
forward
going
basis
because
you
do
hear
some
folks
who
are
kind
of
you
know
inflation
doves
who
are
essentially
saying
we're
going
to
you
know
anniversary
the
? (Correspondent)
02:41.510
initial
tariff
effects
and
it
kind
of
will
come
out
in
the
wash
so
what's
your
expectation
for
how
inflation
tracks
from
here
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
02:48.830
i
don't
think
we've
seen
the
last
of
the
tariff
effect
by
any
stretch
i
think
we're
only
seeing
a
modest
part
of
it
so
far
for
a
whole
bunch
of
reasons
one
of
which
is
that
we
you
know
firms
hoarded
inventory
ahead
of
the
tariffs
and
are
probably
still
working
through
that
so
i
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
03:08.030
think
tariffs
are
going
to
continue
pushing
up
inflation
through
twenty
twenty
six
and
maybe
even
into
twenty
twenty
seven
and
then
at
the
same
time
by
my
reading
the
labor
market
is
just
a
tick
soft
i
think
that
the
you
know
the
monthly
payroll
employment
gains
have
around
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
03:25.910
twenty
thousand
a
month
are
just
slightly
below
what
my
estimate
is
of
the
break
even
given
what
i
think
immigration
is
doing
to
labor
supply
so
what
all
that
means
to
me
is
i
think
we
have
more
inflation
in
training
and
i
am
very
very
puzzled
by
market
expectations
markets
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
03:43.320
right
now
are
expecting
the
next
fed
chair
put
in
place
by
president
trump
to
cut
by
a
sum
total
of
forty
basis
points
my
guess
is
if
that
came
true
president
trump
would
be
incredibly
disappointed
in
his
fed
chair
pick
so
i
think
we're
in
for
lower
interest
rates
higher
Wendy Edelberg (Economic Studies Senior Fellow)
04:04.350
inflation
Autoscroll