UK Inflation Jumps To Highest Since 2013, Breaching BoE Target

 | Mar 22, 2017 06:14

UK inflation surged above the Bank of England’s 2.0% target for the first time in over three years in February, underscoring how consumer spending is likely to be increasingly squeezed by higher prices in 2017.

The Bank of England still looks likely to look through the upturn in inflation, but much will depend on the extent to which consumer spending and wage growth will be dampened this year.

h2 Inflation breaches Bank’s target/h2

Official data show inflation rising to its highest since September 2013. Consumer prices rose 2.3% on a year ago, according to the Office for National Statistics, with the rate of inflation picking up from 1.8% in January and just 0.3% this time last year.

Further upward pressure on consumer prices looks almost certain as firms pass rising costs onto customers in coming months. Recent PMI survey data show companies’ input costs increasing at a rate not exceeded since before the global financial crisis, due mainly to import costs surging higher as a result of the weakened pound. The same survey data indicate that average prices charged for goods and services are meanwhile rising at the fastest rate for almost six years.

Given the recent upturn in firms’ costs, we would expect to see inflation edge above 3% by the end of the year.

h2 Inflation and producer prices/h2