UK retailers raise prices by most since 2011: BRC
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[LONDON] British shoppers were hit last month by the biggest price rises from major retailers since 2011, according to a survey that adds to signs of fast-rising inflation which the Bank of England is trying to tackle with higher interest rates.
The British Retail Consortium said on Wednesday that shop prices rose by 1.8 per cent in February compared with a year earlier, the fastest annual increase since November 2011 and speeding up from 1.5 per cent in January.
The BRC's shop price inflation measure is typically well below the headline rate of consumer price inflation tracked by the BoE and for most of the past year the BRC data showed year-on-year falls in prices.
The pattern has reversed rapidly and will add to the cost of living squeeze faced by British households, who will see regulated energy prices jump by more than 50 per cent in April.
The BRC said food price inflation held at 2.7 per cent last month while non-food inflation sped up to 1.3 per cent from 0.9 per cent in January, driven by health, beauty and furniture products.
Helen Dickinson, the BRC's chief executive, said retailers were being hit by higher shipping rates after crude oil prices almost doubled over the last year, as well as by labour shortages, commodity price increases and soaring energy prices.
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"Retailers are going to great lengths to mitigate against these price rises and support their customers. For example, many supermarkets have expanded their value ranges for food," Dickinson said. "Unfortunately, there are limits to the costs that retailers can absorb."
Britain's consumer prices inflation rate touched a 30-year high of 5.5 per cent in January and is set to climb above 7 per cent in April when domestic power tariffs jump.
The BoE is expected to raise borrowing costs for the third time in a row this month, taking Bank Rate back to 0.75 per cent, its pre-pandemic level. REUTERS
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