It is the costs of food and energy that affect consumers first and impact them most, especially those with lower incomes, and those prices are on the rise.How several of last week's economic reports relate to the Federal Reserve Bank's long-standing easy money policies was thoughtfully outlined in Tuesday's WPI report by Dave Juday. Those policies have included holding the interest rate on Fed funds at virtually zero for several years and three separate quantitative easing (QE) programs under which the Fed has expanded its balance sheet from about $1 trillion before the recession to about $4.4 trillion currently. Basically, the difference between those numbers is the amount of money the Fed pumped (printed) into the U.S. economy since Novem...