Meltdown 101: Health care, education costs rise

WASHINGTON — For recession-weary Americans cutting back on household expenses, a new report on consumer prices offers a few hints: Eat in, not out; buy produce, not meat; and think about buying a new car instead of settling for that used jalopy.

Those examples of which costs are rising or falling come from Wednesday’s Labor Department report on the Consumer Price Index, which showed 0.4 percent overall inflation — mostly on a 9.1 percent spike in gasoline prices — from July to August. Consumer prices fell 1.5 percent for the year that ended Aug. 31, less than historically steep 2.1 percent decline for the year that ended July 31.

Excluding the volatile food and energy sectors, so-called "core" prices rose only 0.1 percent in August and only 1.4 percent in the past year — the smallest increase since Feb. 2004.

But health care and education costs continued to outpace inflation, as they have for years. President Barack Obama has cited rising health care costs as a reason to overhaul the health care system.

The cost of medical care increased 3.3 percent in the past year, the report said, as the price of hospital services jumped 6.5 percent.

While that’s far higher than the 1.5 percent drop in overall prices, health care costs have increased even more quickly in the past. In 1990, they jumped at a 9 percent annual clip, and in 1982, they climbed at an 11.6 percent rate. Overall inflation was much higher in those years as well — 5.4 percent in 1990 and 6.2 percent in 1982.

Meanwhile, education costs, which include tuition and child care, rose 5.4 percent in the past year. The price of textbooks and supplies rose 6.8 percent.

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