Key Takeaways
- October CPI and jobs reports cancelled due to 43-day government shutdown
- Federal Reserve to meet in December without key economic data
- Data delays complicate Fed’s rate decision amid inflation and employment concerns
The US government has cancelled its October consumer inflation report after a 43-day federal shutdown disrupted data collection, creating significant uncertainty ahead of the Federal Reserve’s December policy meeting.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics confirmed it cannot retroactively collect consumer price data for October and will not release the report originally scheduled for November 13.
Shutdown Impact on Economic Data
The October-to-mid-November shutdown also halted publications on crucial indicators including trade and retail sales figures. Earlier this week, the BLS announced it would not release October jobs data because unemployment surveys were not conducted during the shutdown period.
Fed’s December Meeting Challenge
Federal Reserve policymakers will meet on December 9-10 without updated inflation or labor market readings. October employment data will now be released alongside November’s numbers after the policy meeting concludes.
Financial analysts note the data vacuum complicates the central bank’s delicate balancing act between inflation risks and a slowing job market. Extended hiring weakness could support arguments for additional rate cuts, while tariff-related price pressures might justify maintaining current rates.
President Donald Trump’s tariff measures have made inflation reduction more difficult, prompting some Fed officials to express caution about cutting interest rates too quickly.



