UK shop prices rise at slowest pace since May 2022: BRC

    • Inflation has fallen faster than the BOE forecast at the start of November – largely due to a big drop in energy costs.
    • Inflation has fallen faster than the BOE forecast at the start of November – largely due to a big drop in energy costs. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Jan 30, 2024 · 08:32 AM

    PRICES in British shops rose at the slowest annual pace since May 2022 this month, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) said on Tuesday (Jan 30), adding to signs of easing inflation pressures ahead of this week’s Bank of England (BOE) policy decision.

    The BRC said shop price inflation dropped to 2.9 per cent in January from 4.3 per cent in December, driven by heavier discounting of goods in January sales this year than in 2023.

    Non-food prices were up 1.3 per cent, the least since February 2022, while food prices rose 6.1 per cent on the year – the smallest increase since June 2022 – as lower prices for tea and milk were partly offset by higher alcohol duties.

    Mike Watkins, head of retailer and business insight at NielsenIQ, which provides data for the BRC, said lower wholesale costs were allowing supermarkets to cut the price of some goods.

    “However, consumer demand remains fragile as most households are yet to feel better off after nearly two years of inflation,” he said.

    Britain’s headline rate of consumer price inflation, which covers a wider range of goods and services than the BRC data, rose to 4.0 per cent in December from 3.9 per cent in November, its lowest since September 2021.

    Even so, inflation has fallen faster than the BOE forecast at the start of November – largely due to a big drop in energy costs. Many economists expect the central bank to lower its near-term inflation forecasts when it announces its next interest rate decision on Thursday.

    However, with inflation still double the BOE’s target, the central bank is likely to indicate it remains some way from considering cutting interest rates from their current nearly 16-year high of 5.25 per cent. Financial markets see a first quarter-point cut in May or June.

    The BRC data was based on prices collected between Jan 1 and Jan 7. REUTERS

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