UK inflation falls to 17-month low

UK inflation falls to 17-month low

LONDON

The rate of inflation in the U.K. fell sharply in July to a 17-month low largely on the back of lower energy prices, official figures showed yesterday, a welcome development for hard-pressed households struggling during the cost of living crisis.

The Office for National Statistics said the annual rate of inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, was 6.8 percent in July, its lowest level since February 2022, the month Russia invaded Ukraine and sent energy prices surging.

The decline from June's 7.9 percent rate was in line with economists' expectations.

The statistics agency said the fall was largely driven by lower energy prices as last year's sharp increases fell out of the annual comparison. It said that food price inflation, which also spiked sharply in the wake of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, eased too.

Though the decline in the headline rate of inflation will be welcome news for hard-pressed households, it's unlikely to derail market expectations that the Bank of England will raise interest rates again next month, especially as wages are rising at a record high.

Yesterday’s figures also showed that the core rate of inflation, which strips out volatile items such as energy and food, remains high.

Earlier this month, the bank, which is tasked with achieving a 2 percent inflation rate, raised its benchmark interest rate to a fresh 15-year high of 5.25 percent and hinted that it would stay high for some time to bring down persistently high inflation.

Higher interest rates help dampen inflation by making it more expensive for consumers and businesses to borrow to buy homes, cars or equipment.

Central banks around the world have been raising borrowing costs to combat inflation unleashed by higher energy prices after Russia invaded Ukraine and supply chain backups as the global economy recovered from the coronavirus pandemic. In the U.K., inflation hit a peak of 11.1 percent last October.

Despite the fall in July, the U.K. is enduring the highest rate of inflation among the Group of Seven industrial nations, raising concerns that it is stickier in the country than elsewhere. Inflation in the U.S. stands at 3.2 percent and at 5.3 percent across the 20 countries that use the euro currency.

Similarly, the British economy is the only G-7 leading industrial economy yet to recoup the output lost during the coronavirus pandemic. Many economists blame Britain’s departure from the European Union for both sticky inflation and anemic growth, as it has hobbled trade and added costs to businesses.