British consumer price inflation hit a 40-year high of 9.1% in
May - with food and drink prices up 8.6% - and the Bank of
England expects the annual CPI rate to exceed 11% in October
when a 40% rise in regulated energy tariffs will hit.
Friday's figures from the Office for National Statistics showed
that 49% of people said they had bought less food than normal
between June 22 and July 3, up from just 8% when the survey
began in September 2021.
Another 48% said they had needed to spend more than usual on
their food shopping. Overall, 91% of people said their cost of
living had risen over the past month.
These figures match reports from British supermarkets that
shoppers are under increasing financial pressure.
Sainsbury's reported a 4% drop in underlying quarterly sales on
Tuesday and Tesco, Britain's biggest supermarket, said customers
were making smaller, more frequent shopping trips and buying
cheaper own-brand items.
U.S. bank Citi forecast last month that British food price
inflation would exceed 20% by early next year.
(Reporting by David Milliken, Editing by Paul Sandle)
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