---
title: "U.S. Inflation Hits Fastest 3-Year Pace as Core PCE Climbs to 3.8%"
url: https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/05/29/us-inflation-fastest-3-year-pace-aiken/
date: 2026-05-29T12:30:00+00:00
modified: 2026-05-29T17:33:37+00:00
author: ""
categories: ["Business", "News"]
site: "HERE Aiken"
attribution: "HERE Aiken"
---

# U.S. Inflation Hits Fastest 3-Year Pace as Core PCE Climbs to 3.8%

*Source: [HERE Aiken](https://www.hereaiken.com/2026/05/29/us-inflation-fastest-3-year-pace-aiken/) — May 29, 2026 by *

U.S. inflation reached its fastest annual pace in three years in April, with the Federal Reserve’s preferred price gauge pointing to a sustained run of elevated energy costs that will keep interest rates higher for longer — a backdrop that touches every Aiken County household balance sheet and every business in the CSRA.

## What the numbers say

The personal consumption expenditures price index — the inflation measure the Federal Reserve relies on most heavily for policy decisions — rose 3.8 percent in the 12 months through April. That is the largest annual increase since May 2023. Core PCE, which strips out the volatile food and energy categories to reveal underlying price trends, rose 3.3 percent year-over-year in April, up from 3.2 percent in March. On a monthly basis, core PCE rose 0.2 percent in April.

The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Analysis published the data on May 28. The acceleration was driven primarily by higher energy prices, which have remained elevated as the broader macroeconomic environment digests the supply consequences of the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict.

## The rate-cut window keeps moving

Federal Reserve policymakers have signaled openness to the possibility of additional rate increases if inflation does not cool, and the consensus among rate watchers is that rate cuts are now unlikely until late 2026 at the earliest. That is a meaningful shift from earlier expectations of multiple cuts during 2026, and it reshapes the planning assumptions for any Aiken household carrying credit card balances, any local business operating on a line of credit, and anyone in the CSRA considering a home purchase or refinance.

A higher-for-longer rate environment means mortgage rates stay near current levels rather than easing into the second half of the year. Auto loan rates, small-business loan rates, and credit card APRs follow the same direction. For Aiken-area businesses already planning capital expenditures or hiring decisions tied to assumed lower borrowing costs, the new path of policy implies tighter financing for longer.

## Where the pressure is concentrated

The breakdown of the April inflation print shows energy as the primary accelerant. Gasoline prices, electricity costs, and home heating fuels all contributed to the headline number. For Aiken County residents who saw summer cooling bills rise sharply over the past year, the official statistics confirm what households were already seeing on monthly utility statements.

The core measure — which excludes food and energy — also rose, indicating that price pressures are not confined to commodity categories. Services inflation, which includes rent, insurance, and healthcare costs, has remained sticky throughout 2025 and into 2026, and continues to be one of the main reasons the Federal Reserve has been reluctant to cut rates.

## What this means for Aiken businesses

For Aiken-area small business owners, the inflation print reinforces several planning realities for the second half of 2026. First, input costs are unlikely to fall meaningfully in the near term, which means menus, service rates, and product pricing need to reflect sustained higher costs rather than betting on a return to pre-2022 price levels. Second, borrowing costs are unlikely to ease, which favors projects that can be funded from cash flow over projects that depend on new debt. Third, consumer discretionary spending is being squeezed by the same inflation that affects businesses, which has implications for any Aiken retailer or service provider whose customers are tightening their household budgets.

For larger Aiken-area employers — including the cluster around the Savannah River Site and the medical, manufacturing, and education employers across Aiken County — the inflation data feeds directly into wage planning, benefits design, and capital budgeting for the remainder of the fiscal year.

## The path forward

The Federal Reserve’s next policy meeting will be the primary forum for the official response to the April inflation print. In the meantime, the data has already moved markets — bond yields ticked higher and rate-cut expectations shifted further out into 2026 — and that re-pricing flows directly into the borrowing costs that Aiken households and businesses will see on their next statements.

The broader takeaway for the CSRA is that the inflation story is not over, the Federal Reserve is not in a hurry, and financial planning for the rest of 2026 should assume that the current rate environment persists.
