![]() Inflation Surge Places Growing Pressure on Black and Minority-Owned Firms, New Analysis FindsApril CPI and PPI Reports Show Escalating Cost Pressures Across Transportation, Food Services, Construction, and Consumer Industries
WASHINGTON - May 14, 2026 - PRLog -- New analysis from Creative Investment Research (CIR) finds that elevated inflation is placing growing economic pressure on Black- and minority-owned firms across the United States, particularly in transportation, logistics, food services, retail, construction, and neighborhood-
The findings follow the release of the April 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) reports from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The CPI increased 0.6 percent in April and 3.8 percent over the past 12 months, while the PPI rose 1.4 percent in April and 6.0 percent year-over-year — the largest annual increase in producer prices since December 2022. Energy inflation remains the dominant driver. The energy component of CPI increased 17.9 percent over the past year, while producer prices for energy-intensive goods and transportation services surged sharply in April. According to the analysis, Black and minority-owned firms are disproportionately vulnerable. "Inflation is no longer confined to a few volatile categories," The analysis highlights several sectors facing elevated risk:
CIR estimates that inflation-related cost pressures on Black-owned employer firms may now represent several billion dollars in annual margin compression and operating-cost exposure, particularly if current energy and supply-chain pressures persist. The analysis further argues that Minority Business Enterprises (MBEs) should be viewed as part of the solution to inflationary pressure and supply-chain fragility. "MBEs increase supplier competition, improve regional sourcing flexibility, reduce concentration risk, and strengthen domestic productive capacity," Cunningham said. "Supplier diversity should be viewed not simply as social policy, but as an economic resilience and inflation-reduction strategy." The complete analyses are available at:
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