Just a moment...

Top
Help
Upgrade to AI Tools

We've upgraded AI Tools on TaxTMI with two powerful modes:

1. Basic
Quick overview summary answering your query with referencesCategory-wise results to explore all relevant documents on TaxTMI

2. Advanced
• Includes everything in Basic
Detailed report covering:
     -   Overview Summary
     -   Governing Provisions [Acts, Notifications, Circulars]
     -   Relevant Case Laws
     -   Tariff / Classification / HSN
     -   Expert views from TaxTMI
     -   Practical Guidance with immediate steps and dispute strategy

• Also highlights how each document is relevant to your query, helping you quickly understand key insights without reading the full text.Help Us Improve - by giving the rating with each AI Result:

Explore AI Tools

Powered by Weblekha - Building Scalable Websites

×

By creating an account you can:

Logo TaxTMI
>
Call Us / Help / Feedback

Contact Us At :

E-mail: [email protected]

Call / WhatsApp at: +91 99117 96707

For more information, Check Contact Us

FAQs :

To know Frequently Asked Questions, Check FAQs

Most Asked Video Tutorials :

For more tutorials, Check Video Tutorials

Submit Feedback/Suggestion :

Email :
Please provide your email address so we can follow up on your feedback.
Category :
Description :
Min 15 characters0/2000
Make Most of Text Search
  1. Checkout this video tutorial: How to search effectively on TaxTMI.
  2. Put words in double quotes for exact word search, eg: "income tax"
  3. Avoid noise words such as : 'and, of, the, a'
  4. Sort by Relevance to get the most relevant document.
  5. Press Enter to add multiple terms/multiple phrases, and then click on Search to Search.
  6. Text Search
  7. The system will try to fetch results that contains ALL your words.
  8. Once you add keywords, you'll see a new 'Search In' filter that makes your results even more precise.
  9. Text Search
Add to...
You have not created any category. Kindly create one to bookmark this item!
Create New Category
Hide
Title :
Description :
❮❮ Hide
Default View
Expand ❯❯
Close ✕
🔎 News - Adv. Search
TEXT SEARCH:

Press 'Enter' to add multiple search terms. Rules for Better Search

Search In:
Main Text + AI Text
  • Main Text
  • Main Text + AI Text
  • AI Text
Category: ?
Categorized by AI
---- All Categories ----
  • ---- All Categories ----
  • Income Tax
  • GST
  • Customs, DGFT & SEZ
  • FEMA & RBI
  • Corp. Laws, SEBI & IBC
  • PMLA, Black Money & ED
  • Budget
  • News and Press Release
  • PTI News
Month:
---- All Months ----
  • ---- All Months ----
  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
Year:
---- All Years ----
  • ---- All Years ----
  • 2026
  • 2025
  • 2024
  • 2023
  • 2022
  • 2021
  • 2020
  • 2019
  • 2018
  • 2017
  • 2016
  • 2015
  • 2014
  • 2013
  • 2012
  • 2011
Sort By: ?
In Sort By 'Default', exact matches for text search are shown at the top, followed by the remaining results in their regular order.
RelevanceDefaultDate
    No Records Found
    ❯❯
    MaximizeMaximizeMaximize
    0 / 200
    Expand Note
    Add to Folder

    No Folders have been created

      +

      Are you sure you want to delete "My most important" ?

      NOTE:

      News
      Showing Results for :
      Reset Filters
      Results Found:
      AI TextQuick Glance by AIHeadnote
      Show All SummariesHide All Summaries
      No Records Found

      News

      Back

      All News

      Showing Results for :
      Reset Filters
      Showing
      Records
      ExpandCollapse
        No Records Found

        News

        Back

        All News

        Showing Results for : Reset Filters
        Case ID :
        Customs & Trade

        Trump says inflation is 'defeated', the Fed has cut rates, yet prices remain too high for many

        October 12, 2025

        📋
        Contents
        Note

        Note

        -

        Bookmark

        print

        Print

        Login to TaxTMI
        Verification Pending

        The Email Id has not been verified. Click on the link we have sent on

        Didn't receive the mail? Resend Mail

        Don't have an account? Register Here

        Washington, Oct 12 (AP) Inflation has risen in three of the last four months and is slightly higher than it was a year ago, when it helped sink then-Vice President Kamala Harris' presidential campaign. Yet you wouldn't know it from listening to President Donald Trump or even some of the inflation fighters at the Federal Reserve.

        Trump told the United Nations General Assembly late last month: “Grocery prices are down, mortgage rates are down, and inflation has been defeated.” And at a high-profile speech in August, just before the Fed cut its key interest rate for the first time this year, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said: “Inflation, though still somewhat elevated, has come down a great deal from its post-pandemic highs. Upside risks to inflation have diminished.” Yet dismissing or even downplaying inflation while it is still above the Fed's target of 2 per cent poses big risks for the White House and the Federal Reserve. For the Trump administration, it could find itself on the wrong side of a potent issue: Surveys show that many Americans still see high prices as a major burden on their finances.

        The Fed may be taking an even bigger gamble: It has cut its key interest rate on the assumption that the Trump administration's tariffs will only cause a temporary bump up in inflation. If that turns out to be wrong — if inflation gets worse or remains elevated for longer than expected — the Fed's inflation-fighting credibility could take a hit.

        That credibility plays a crucial role in the Fed's ability to keep prices stable. If Americans are confident that the central bank can keep inflation in check, they won't take steps — such as demanding sharply higher pay when prices rise — that can launch an inflationary spiral. Companies often increase prices further to offset higher labour costs.

        But Karen Dynan, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said this week that with memories of pandemic-era inflation still fresh and tariffs pushing up the cost of imported goods, consumers and businesses could start to lose confidence that inflation will stay low.

        “If that proves to be the case, in hindsight it will be that the Fed cuts -- and I do expect several more -- are going to be seen as a mistake,” Dynan said.

        So far, the Trump administration's tariffs haven't lifted inflation as much as many economists expected earlier this year. And it remains far below its 9.1 per cent peak three years ago. Still, consumer prices increased 2.9 per cent in August from a year earlier, up from 2.6 per cent at the same time last year and above the Fed's 2 per cent target.

        The government is scheduled to release the September inflation report on Wednesday, but the data will probably be delayed by the government shutdown.

        Tariffs have pushed up the cost of many imported items, including furniture, appliances, and toys. Overall, the cost of long-lasting manufactured goods rose nearly 2 per cent in August from a year earlier. It was a modest gain, but it comes after nearly three decades during which the cost of such items mostly fell.

        The cost of some everyday goods is still rising more quickly than before the pandemic: Grocery prices moved up 2.7 per cent in August from a year ago, the largest gain, outside the pandemic, since 2015. Coffee prices have soared nearly 21 per cent in the past year, partly because Trump has slapped 50 per cent import taxes on Brazil, a leading coffee exporter, and also because climate change-induced droughts have cut into coffee bean harvests.

        Most Fed officials are still concerned that inflation is too high, according to the minutes of its Sept. 16-17 meeting. Yet they still chose to cut their key interest rate, because they were more worried about the risk of worsening unemployment than about higher inflation.

        But the concern for some economists is that the ongoing rollout of tariffs and the fact that many companies are still implementing price hikes in response could result in more than just a temporary boost to inflation.

        “It is a big gamble after what we've been going through ... to count on it being transitory,” said Jason Furman, an economist at Harvard University and a former top adviser to President Barack Obama. “Once upon a time, (3 per cent inflation) would have been considered really high.” Just two weeks ago, Trump slapped new tariffs on a range of products, including 100 per cent on pharmaceuticals, 50 per cent on kitchen cabinets and bathroom vanities, and 25 per cent on heavy trucks. On Friday, he threatened “a massive increase of tariffs” on imports from China in response to that country's restrictions on rare earth exports.

        Some companies are still raising prices to offset the tariff costs. Duties on steel and aluminium imports have pushed up the cost of the cans used by Campbell Soups, leading the company's CEO to say in September that it will implement “surgical pricing initiatives." Chris Butler, CEO of National Tree Company, the nation's largest artificial Christmas tree seller, says his company will raise prices by about 10 per cent this holiday season on its trees, wreaths, and garlands to offset tariff costs. About 45 per cent of its trees are made in China, with the rest from Southeast Asia, Mexico, and other countries. The cost of labour and real estate is too high to make them in the United States, he said.

        Butler also expects there will be a reduced supply of artificial trees and decorations this year, which could lift industry-wide prices further, because most production in China shut down when tariffs on that country hit 145 per cent earlier this year. Production resumed after Trump reduced the duties to 30 per cent but at a slower pace.

        Butler has pushed his suppliers to absorb some of the cost of the tariffs, but they won't pay all of it.

        “At the end of the day, we can't absorb the entirety of it and our factories can't absorb the entirety of it,” he said. “So we've had to pass along some of the increases to consumers.” Many Fed policymakers are aware of the risks. Jeffrey Schmid, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, who votes on interest rate decisions, said Monday that high inflation that results from a loss of confidence in the central bank is harder to fight than other price spikes, such as those that result from supply disruptions.

        “The Fed must maintain its credibility on inflation,” Schmid said. “History has shown that while all inflations are universally disliked, not all inflations are equally costly to fight.” Yet some Fed officials say that other trends are offsetting the impact of tariffs. Fed governor Stephen Miran, whom Trump appointed just before the central bank's September meeting, said Tuesday that a steady slowdown in rental costs should reduce underlying inflation in the coming months. And the sharp drop in immigration as a result of the administration's clampdown will reduce demand, he said, cooling inflation pressures.

        “I'm more sanguine about the inflation outlook than a lot of other people are,” he said. (AP) SKS SKS

        Inflation risk persists as rate cuts and tariffs may undermine price stability and central bank credibility. Inflation remains above the Fed's target while rate cuts proceed amid political claims that inflation is defeated; tariffs and duty pass through to consumer prices risk making inflation persistent rather than transitory, threatening the Federal Reserve's credibility and the anchoring of inflation expectations.
                          Cases where this provision is explicitly mentioned in the judgment/order text; may not be exhaustive. To view the complete list of cases mentioning this section, Click here.
                            Provisions expressly mentioned in the judgment/order text.

                                Inflation risk persists as rate cuts and tariffs may undermine price stability and central bank credibility.

                                Inflation remains above the Fed's target while rate cuts proceed amid political claims that inflation is defeated; tariffs and duty pass through to consumer prices risk making inflation persistent rather than transitory, threatening the Federal Reserve's credibility and the anchoring of inflation expectations.





                                Note: It is a system-generated summary and is for quick reference only.

                                Topics

                                ActsIncome Tax
                                No Records Found