The government will never tell the truth about inflation because if they did, confidence would collapse. They always alter the formulas, revise the definitions, and pretend the economy is improving while the average person knows damn well something is seriously wrong. The April producer price numbers are simply confirming what anyone running a business already knows. Costs are rising across the board again and this time it is working through the production side of the economy where the damage becomes far more dangerous.
Producer prices jumped 1.4% in April, the largest monthly increase since 2022, pushing annual wholesale inflation to 6.0%. That is not some isolated blip the talking heads on television can explain away with clever slogans. This is the type of inflation that bleeds through the entire economic chain because producers cannot absorb rising costs indefinitely. Eventually they pass everything directly onto the consumer because survival comes first.
This is what people fail to understand about inflation. It does not begin at the checkout counter. By the time consumers notice prices exploding, the inflationary wave has already moved through energy, transportation, raw materials, warehousing, financing, and manufacturing. The disease starts deep inside the production structure itself.
Energy was once again the primary culprit. Gasoline prices surged over 15% during the month while diesel fuel climbed sharply as tensions in the Middle East continue escalating. Every war in the Middle East eventually becomes an economic event because oil remains the lifeblood of industrial civilization no matter how many politicians pretend otherwise. You cannot sanction major producers, threaten shipping lanes, attack fossil fuels, and simultaneously expect stable prices. That is fantasy economics taught by people who have never run anything except deficits.
Everything depends on energy. Food prices rise because transportation rises. Construction rises because machinery rises. Manufacturing rises because production costs rise. Diesel fuels the trucks moving goods across the country. Once energy spikes, inflation infects the entire system like a cancer.
The report showed rising costs in trucking, storage, wholesale trade, and machinery production. That is where this becomes serious because it proves inflation is spreading structurally through the economy rather than remaining isolated inside one sector. This is exactly how inflation behaved during previous monetary crises. It starts gradually and then becomes embedded.
At the same time, governments continue borrowing with complete abandon as if debt no longer matters. Washington is issuing debt at a pace that historically only appeared during major wars, yet politicians continue promising more spending programs while pretending deficits are irrelevant. Central banks are trapped by their own policies. Raise rates further and sovereign debt servicing begins spiraling out of control. Lower rates too quickly and inflation erupts again. There is no painless solution because the entire system has been mismanaged for decades.
People sense this instinctively even if economists refuse to admit it publicly. Families know their standard of living is collapsing. Insurance premiums continue rising. Grocery prices remain elevated. Utility bills climb. Housing costs are becoming impossible for younger generations. Yet the media continues celebrating tiny changes in manipulated inflation statistics as if the crisis has passed.
The real problem is that this inflation is no longer merely monetary. The world economy itself is fragmenting. War risks are disrupting trade routes. Sanctions are distorting commodity markets. Europe’s energy suicide has raised industrial costs globally. Governments are desperately trying to maintain welfare states and military spending simultaneously while drowning in debt. This is not normal cyclical inflation. This is systemic deterioration.
Once inflation enters the production chain, it tends to become persistent because businesses restructure prices permanently to survive. That is when inflation becomes politically dangerous. Small businesses disappear first because they cannot absorb financing and energy costs indefinitely. Consumers reduce discretionary spending. Economic confidence declines. Capital begins searching for safety elsewhere.
The politicians will continue insisting inflation is under control because admitting reality would expose the scale of the financial mismanagement. But the April producer price report is another warning sign that the underlying pressure inside the economy is building once again. The crisis never ended. They merely stopped reporting it honestly.
