Minneapolis is the first major metropolitan area to have inflation rates below the Fed's 2% target.
According to Bloomberg, Minneapolis hit the goal in May with an inflation rate of 1.8%.
The rate is likely due to aggressive legislating to address soaring housing costs in the city.
While Minneapolis residents spent 39.9% of their monthly income on housing costs, their co-parts in San Francisco paid 46.7% of their monthly income to housing; residents of Boston shelled out a whopping 60.7% of their income for housing costs, per Bloomberg.
People ideally would spend around 30% of their income on housing, senior vice president of the National Low Income Housing Coalition Andrew Aurand, told CNBC.
Persons:
Income Housing Coalition Andrew Aurand, Ron Feldman
Organizations:
Bloomberg, Service, US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Minneapolis, CNBC, Income Housing Coalition, Minneapolis Fed
Locations:
Minneapolis, Wall, Silicon, San Francisco, Boston, New York City, Itasca