UK shop prices jump most since March 2024, fuelling Bank of England inflation fears | investingLive
UK inflation risks build as food-driven price surge pressures BoE and squeezes consumers.
UK shop prices rose at their fastest pace since March 2024, stoking concerns about persistent inflation. The British Retail Consortium (BRC) reported a 0.9% monthly increase in August, driven by a 4.2% jump in food costs—the sharpest since February 2024. Staples such as butter, eggs, and chocolate saw steep rises, linked to strong demand, labour costs, and poor harvests.
The Bank of England has already warned that higher food inflation is lifting inflation expectations, potentially fuelling wage demands. Headline UK CPI climbed to 3.8% in July, the highest in 18 months, and is expected to hit 4% in September before easing.
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The data: UK BRC Shop Price Index (Y/Y) August 2025: +0.9%
- expected +1.0%
- prior +0.7%