U.S. Delays Key Inflation Report as Stagflation Worries Mount
A postponed dataset, rising prices, and the politics of erasure.

By Brian Daitzman
“The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the convinced Communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction (i.e., the reality of experience) and the distinction between true and false (i.e., the standards of thought) no longer exist.” - Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951)
Americans are paying more for groceries, rent, and gas. At that exact moment, the government shelved the dataset that explains why. No explanation, no timetable, no numbers — just silence where clarity should have been. What sounds like a technical delay reverberates far beyond the Bureau of Labor Statistics. It ripples through markets, households, and the fragile trust that binds citizens to their institutions. The missing report is not just about inflation. It is about whether the public is entitled to see the truth it has already paid for.
Obfuscation As Governing Philosophy
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) abruptly postponed its consumer expenditures report, the dataset that determines how inflation is measured in the year ahead. No explanation was given. No new date set.
Last year, when the release was delayed, the agency cited an error and announced a rescheduled publication; this year it offered neither explanation nor date. The absence is striking because the report is central to the Consumer Price Index (CPI), which shapes interest rates, wages, and the daily cost of living. Critics warn the delay is not accidental but political.
It follows President Trump’s firing of BLS commissioner Erika McEntarfer and a series of attacks on the independence of federal statistics.
By withholding data, the administration erodes trust precisely when households need clarity most. In a democracy, data is not a luxury. It is the scaffolding of informed debate. Without it, the nation’s economic story is told not by evidence but by political convenience.
Inflation and Living Standards
The delay comes as Americans face mounting costs in everyday life.
Inflation accelerated in August, rising 2.9% year-over-year, the fastest pace since January. On a monthly basis, CPI jumped 0.4%, its sharpest increase since December. Shelter costs, nearly a third of the index, advanced 0.4% in a single month. Food rose 0.5%. Energy climbed 0.7%, led by a 1.9% surge in gasoline. These are not sterile numbers. They translate into rent hikes, steeper grocery bills, and costlier commutes. Eggs cost 11% more than last year; coffee is up 20%. Small items, but their sting is daily. Each figure is a quiet subtraction from household security.
The rise in prices does more than empty wallets. It drains confidence.
Economists call inflation a tax without legislation, a silent redistribution from consumers to producers and lenders. Households feel it most at checkout, where choices shrink and compromises multiply.
Analysts note that tariffs imposed by Trump’s administration are pushing some goods higher, while shelter and food remain persistent drivers. Without clear data, the narrative of blame is easily twisted. Families are left caught between partisan spin and the relentless arithmetic of rising prices. Inflation thus destabilizes twice: once as an economic burden, again as an epistemic one, stripping citizens not only of purchasing power but of the ability to understand their own reality.
Labor Market Pressures
Employment data adds to the unease.
Weekly jobless claims spiked to 263,000 in early September, the highest since 2021. Revised employment data showed the economy added far fewer jobs in 2024 and early 2025 than initially reported. Hiring has slowed. Layoffs are creeping upward. Economists warn of a stagflationary risk — a toxic mix of rising prices and stagnant growth.
America has faced this specter before, most notoriously in the 1970s. Back then, oil shocks fueled the crisis. Today, tariffs and policy whiplash play a similar destabilizing role.
Officials later said Texas fraud inflated claims, and filings fell the next week — but the damage to confidence was done. Every revision, every unexplained spike, feeds the perception of instability. Households, already stretched, begin to doubt not only their jobs but the credibility of the data itself. Businesses hesitate to invest. Markets wobble.
In this climate, even technical errors take on symbolic weight, reinforcing the sense that the ground is shifting underfoot.
A delayed BLS report, set against this backdrop, is not just another bureaucratic misstep. It is another blow to public confidence in the economic compass.
The Politics of Erasure
The controversy is not only economic but political.
This postponement is not simply a hiccup. It is part of a larger pattern—a politics of erasure. When governments delay or distort data, they do more than inconvenience analysts. They undermine the shared reality on which citizens depend. Erasure is not debate; it is rule by omission.
The parallels are visible at the Environmental Protection Agency. Scientists have been ordered to halt publication of research until it passes political review.
The Office of Research and Development, once the agency’s scientific backbone, is being dismantled. Just as environmental evidence is being suppressed, economic evidence is being delayed. The effect is the same: citizens face higher risks — whether to health or to finances — without the knowledge they need to respond. Critics liken this to taxation without representation: taxpayers fund the work, but the truth never reaches them. They also warn it is the most dangerous form of so-called cancel culture. Unlike private platforms deciding which viewpoints to host, here the state itself decides which realities citizens may see. That is not ordinary politics. It is, as critics argue, textbook authoritarianism — the substitution of propaganda for empirical truth.
Political theorist Hannah Arendt warned that the ideal subject of authoritarianism is not the convinced believer but the citizen who no longer distinguishes fact from fiction. America is not there.
Yet the steady erosion of statistical and scientific independence makes that collapse easier to imagine. Each postponed report, each silenced study, pushes the line further. Truth recedes. Power fills the void.
Trump Shoots the Messenger
One basic character of the politicization necessary to create an authoritarian regime is that public employ…
Truth Decay
Inflation data is more than a technical measure. It is the map that guides economic life— mortgage rates, wages, grocery bills, savings plans. By delaying or distorting such data, the Trump administration blinds not only policymakers but also the public. When reality itself is suppressed, households pay the price twice: once in their budgets, again in their democracy.
The greater danger is not just missing numbers but missing trust. A society that cannot agree on the cost of living cannot agree on the solutions to its problems. If statistics can be withheld at will, reality becomes negotiable. And a society without a shared baseline of truth is a society adrift. The postponed report is more than a bureaucratic lapse. It is a warning. Data integrity is democracy’s foundation; erode it and citizens navigate without a compass.
That is the truest inflation: The steady devaluation of truth itself.
References
Courtenay Brown, “Bureau of Labor Statistics postpones key data report,” Axios, September 19, 2025. https://www.axios.com/2025/09/19/bls-cpi-report-inflation
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Consumer Price Index — August 2025” (News Release). https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm
U.S. Department of Labor, “Unemployment Insurance Weekly Claims — Week ending Sept 6, 2025.” https://www.dol.gov/ui/data.pdf
Jeff Cox, “Consumer prices rose at annual rate of 2.9% in August, as weekly jobless claims jump,” CNBC, September 11, 2025. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/09/11/consumer-prices-rose-at-annual-rate-of-2point9percent-in-august-as-weekly-jobless-claims-jump.html
Max Zahn, “Inflation climbed in August as Trump’s tariffs intensified,” ABC News, September 11, 2025. https://abcnews.go.com/Business/inflation-expected-climbed-august-fed-weighs-interest-rate/story?id=125436582
Lauren Aratani, “US inflation rises in August as firms pass Trump tariffs cost on to consumers,” The Guardian, September 11, 2025. https://www.theguardian.com/business/2025/sep/11/us-inflation-august-trump-tariffs
Ben Berkowitz, “Labor Statistics site suffers outage before crucial August jobs report,” Axios, September 5, 2025. https://www.axios.com/2025/09/05/trump-jobs-report-august-bls-website-outage
Amudalat Ajasa & Hannah Natanson, “EPA tells scientists to stop publishing studies, employees say,” The Washington Post, September 20, 2025. https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate-environment/2025/09/20/epa-scientists-research-publications/
Erik Stokstad, “In ‘blow to the environment,’ EPA begins to dismantle its research office,” Science, July 22, 2025. https://www.science.org/content/article/blow-environment-epa-begins-dismantle-its-research-office
Rob Stein, “Trump administration shuts down EPA’s scientific research arm,” NPR, July 20, 2025. https://www.npr.org/2025/07/20/nx-s1-5474320/trump-epa-scientific-research-zeldin
Hannah Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism, 1951.
Brian Daitzman is the Editor of The Intellectualist. Read the original article here.
Our data is going to be wrong and this will keep us in the dark. Considering we the taxpayer pay for this corrupt Trump regime, we continue to be in crisis.
Truth Decay indeed. Ouch!