
Why has U.S. inflation consistently fallen short of expectations after the tariffs were implemented?

Since the implementation of Trump's tariffs in February, U.S. core inflation has fallen short of expectations for five consecutive months. Reasons include traders importing in advance, an increase in Mexican goods leading to deflation, the limited impact of tariffs on CPI, and negative effects on the service industry and economic demand. Future CPI growth may be below market expectations, and there are risks regarding the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut expectations. The costs of tariffs are mainly borne by four links in the trade chain, resulting in a limited impact on CPI. Overall, tariffs have led to stagflation in goods and a recession in services, with core CPI declining due to the drag from services
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