Inflation was supposed to be yesterday’s problem. This time last year, the government’s preferred measure of the annual increase in the cost of living was running at less than 1%. Now it stands at 5.4% – the highest in almost 30 years – and it has not peaked yet.
With the lagged impact of the supply-chain bottlenecks of last autumn feeding through into prices in the shops and a likely 50% jump in domestic energy bills to come, inflation will certainly exceed 6% in April and may be closer to 7%.
Clearly, the data released by the Office for National Statistics will concern the Bank of England, which is mandated to hit the government’s 2% inflation target and has continually underestimated price pressure over the past year.
The Bank’s monetary policy committee will next meet in early February – and with the cost of food, household goods, eating out, staying in hotels and clothing and footwear all pushing inflation higher last month – the chances of an increase in borrowing costs from 0.25% to 0.5% have increased.
Threadneedle Street’s view is that inflation will peak in the spring and then start to head back down towards target. A return to a more normal economy as the impact of the Omicron variant wanes could help if consumers start spending less on goods (where inflationary pressure is most apparent) and more on services.
But the ONS figures for producer prices – the cost paid by firms for fuel and raw materials and the cost of goods leaving factory gates – suggest there is plenty of inflationary pressure in the pipeline. Industry’s input prices were 13.5% higher in December than a year earlier while output prices were up 9.3%. In both cases there was only a small fall from November’s even higher levels, and the Bank’s fear is
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