After three months of accelerating inflation, the June 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) finally delivered encouraging news. Consumer prices fell 0.4 percent during the month—the largest monthly decline since April 2020—reducing the annual inflation rate from 4.2 percent in May to 3.5 percent in June . For Black and minority-owned businesses, however, the June report should not be interpreted as an all-clear signal. The decline in headline inflation was driven almost entirely by falling energy prices rather than a broad-based easing of price pressures. While lower gasoline prices provide immediate relief for transportation-dependent businesses, many of the structural costs confronting minority-owned firms—including food, housing, labor, and services—remain elevated. Energy Prices Reverse Course The most significant development in June was the sharp decline in energy prices. The energy index fell 5.7 percent during the month, its largest one-month decline since April 2020. Gasoline pric...
When health care enters the political conversation, the debate often extends beyond the scope of hospitals, insurance plans, and public health. It becomes a conversation about the economy, public trust in systems, and the decisions voters make at the ballot box. That intersection of health care, economics, and policy was the focus of Axios Live: Health Care’s Emerging Battlefield event on June 24, where researchers, policymakers, and advocates joined in discussion about the future of health care access and affordability, and how the public views these issues. Continuing my focus on public health policy this summer, I attended the event hosted by Axios and sponsored by the Planned Parenthood Action Fund . The event featured KFF’s Ashley Kirzinger , Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Rep. Sydney Kamlager-Dove (D-Calif.), and Planned Parenthood Action Fund President and CEO Alexis McGill Johnson. I experienced the greatest insight from Axios’ first guest, KFF’s Director of Survey Meth...