UK inflation falls for first time in nearly a year
Send a link to a friend
[September 14, 2022]
By David Milliken and Andy Bruce
LONDON (Reuters) - British consumer price
inflation fell for the first time in almost a year in August as a drop
in fuel prices offered some unexpected - and probably brief - respite to
households and the Bank of England.
Annual consumer price growth slowed to 9.9% from July's 40-year high of
10.1%, the Office for National Statistics said on Wednesday. This was
its first drop since September 2021 and below expectations in a Reuters
poll for it to rise to 10.2%.
However, economists warned inflation was likely to peak at around 11% in
October when a new household energy tariff cap begins, and said it could
be slow to fall due to underlying pressures and new government fiscal
stimulus.
"The Bank of England will have to continue turning the screws," said
Paul Dales, chief UK economist at consultancy Capital Economics.
Britain's central bank had been expected to raise interest rates on
Thursday, but it delayed the decision by a week following the death of
Queen Elizabeth.
Financial markets see an 80% chance that the BoE will raise rates by
0.75 percentage points to 2.5% on Sept. 22. This would be its biggest
rate rise since 1989, excluding a brief attempt to bolster sterling
during a 1992 exchange rate crisis.
Most economists polled by Reuters think a half-point rise is more
likely, but also expect the BoE to continue raising rates into next
year, despite a slowing economy at risk of recession.
Britain has been hit hard by the surge in European natural gas prices
caused by Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has added to post-COVID
supply-chain bottlenecks and labour shortages, creating an intense
squeeze on living standards.
Britain's inflation is the highest in the G7 group of big advanced
economies, although below that in several European countries, including
Spain and the Netherlands.
STICKY INFLATION?
The BoE's task of returning inflation to its 2% target has been made
slightly easier, in the short term at least, by new Prime Minister Liz
Truss's decision to cap household energy prices, which will rise by 25%
rather than 80% in October.
Before the cap, economists had forecast inflation could exceed 15% early
next year.
[to top of second column] |
A view of fuel pumps at a BP petrol
station in central London, Britain, August 2, 2022. REUTERS/Henry
Nicholls
The government is expected to use public borrowing to compensate energy
companies for the lower prices - which is likely to cost around 100 billion
pounds ($116 billion) - and has promised other support and tax cuts.
This extra stimulus for an economy which is running close to capacity, with the
lowest unemployment since 1974, will sustain domestic inflation pressures and
require the BoE to raise rates by more to return inflation to its 2% target,
economists say.
"While such fiscal interventions will ease the near-term pain for consumers as
well as lower the peak rate of inflation, they tilt the risks to our medium-term
inflation calls to the upside," said Kallum Pickering, senior economist at bank
Berenberg.
Financial markets expect BoE rates to peak around 4.5% in the middle of next
year.
There were mixed messages for the future path of inflation in Wednesday's
numbers. CPI rose by 0.5% in August from July on a non-seasonally adjusted basis
- below economists' forecasts of 0.6% and less than the month before.
Prices for vehicle fuels and lubricants dropped by 6.8% in August, their largest
monthly fall since April 2020, and producer price data showed lower pressure in
the pipeline.
Manufacturers' costs for raw materials and energy fell 1.2% in monthly terms in
August, the first drop in two years as crude oil prices eased. Factory selling
prices also declined slightly on the month.
However, core CPI - which excludes food, energy, alcohol and tobacco prices, and
which some economists think gives a better steer for medium-term price trends -
picked up to an annual 6.3% from 6.2%, its highest since 1992.
The BoE also keeps a close watch on surveys of public and business expectations
for future inflation - which have hit record highs - as well as on wages, which
are rising faster than the BoE is comfortable with, though much less than
inflation.
($1 = 0.8657 pounds)
(Reporting by David Milliken; editing by Toby Chopra)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |