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Thursday May 02, 2024

British inflation sees biggest jump in two years

By our correspondents
October 19, 2016

LONDON: British inflation recorded its sharpest jump in more than two years in September, even without any direct evidence of the weaker pound pushing up prices, official figures showed on Tuesday. Annual consumer price inflation rose to 1.0 percent from 0.6 percent in August, the highest level since November 2014 and the biggest jump from one month to the next since June 2014, the Office for National Statistics said.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected a reading of 0.9 percent, and Tuesday´s figure was at the top end of the range of forecasts. They are likely to view September´s rise as only the start of a much broader increase, fuelled by the pound´s near 20 percent plunge since June´s vote to leave the European Union.  "The worrying factor is that today´s figure represents only a tiny part of sterling´s steep drop, and no effect from the second big tumble earlier this month," Thomas Laskey, fixed income investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, said.

Sterling shot up briefly against the dollar and British government bond prices fell after the stronger than expected figures which will further dampen expectations that the Bank of England will cut interest rates again this year.

BoE Governor Mark Carney last week said the central bank could tolerate "a bit" of an overshoot against its inflation target, to help accommodate economic growth and employment. Official statisticians said they were waiting for clear signs of an impact from the weakened currency.

Most of the rise in inflation in September was due to the biggest monthly jump in clothing prices since 2010 and a rise in fuel costs, which had been falling a year earlier. Looking at the three months to September as a whole, prices were up 0.7 percent on a year earlier versus the BoE´s forecast for inflation to average 0.76 percent over the period. The central bank forecast in August that inflation would pick up sharply to hit its 2 percent target in around a year and then overshoot for the next couple of years, as sterling´s big fall after Britain´s vote to leave the EU pushes up the cost of imports.  But the surge in inflation risks proving bigger, after sterling plunged to its lowest level on record against a basket of currencies last week, something which is likely to force the BoE to revise up its inflation forecasts next month.