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Wholesale inflation eases to 2.3% in April, lowest level in two years

The Labor Department said Thursday the producer price index climbed just 0.2% in April, a sign that price pressures in the economy are beginning to abate.

Inflation at the wholesale level rose less than expected in April, a sign that painfully high consumer prices are beginning to loosen their stranglehold on the U.S. economy one year after the Federal Reserve began rapidly raising interest rates.

The Labor Department said Thursday that its producer price index, which measures inflation at the wholesale level before it reaches consumers, climbed 0.2% in April from the previous month. On an annual basis, prices are up 2.3%.

Those figures are both lower than the 2.4% headline increase and 0.3% monthly figure forecast by Refinitiv economists.

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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