Businesses are telling Federal Reserve officials that inflationary pressures are pushing up their costs and raising consumer prices, the Federal Reserve said in a report Wednesday.

“Most Districts reported significantly elevated prices, fueled by rising demand for goods and raw materials. Reports of input cost increases were widespread across industry sectors, driven by product scarcity resulting from supply chain bottlenecks,” the Fed said in its October Beige Book, an occasional compilation of reports from the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks about what they are hearing from local businesses.

Although conveyed with the mild language typical of the Beige Book, Fed watchers regard the tone of the report’s inflation news as a sign that officials are becoming increasingly concerned.

“Many firms raised selling prices indicating a greater ability to pass along cost increases to customers amid strong demand,” the Beige Book reports. “Expectations for future price growth varied with some expecting price to remain high or increase further while others expected prices to moderate over the next 12 months.”

The supply-chain problems and a shortage of workers are not just pushing up prices. They are also holding back growth, according to the Beige Book.

“Several Districts noted, however, that the pace of growth slowed this period, constrained by supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, and uncertainty around the Delta variant of COVID-19,” the Beige Book reports.

The Fed noted that job growth was only “modest to moderate” in recent weeks. Despite a high level of demand for workers, “labor growth was dampened by a low supply of workers,” the Fed said.

Some highlights from the regional Fed reports of inflationary pressures and supply chain disruptions.

Growth was reported as “modest” by Boston, New York, Richmond, Chicago, and Philadelphia Feds. That is generally understood as indicating a low level of economic growth.

A bit better is “moderate,” which was the descriptive term used by the the Fed banks in Atlanta, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, and San Francisco.

The Dallas Fed reported growth as “solid.” The Cleveland Fed appeared to have the strongest growth assessment, saying economic growth “remained strong.”