As Food Costs Climb UK Inflation Falls Short Of Expectations

Digital Zeitgeist – As Food Costs Climb UK Inflation Falls Short Of Expectations

The Bank of England has been dealt another blow with the release of the March Consumer Price Index (CPI) numbers, which show that inflation has fallen back to 10.1% from 10.4%. This is the seventh successive month that headline CPI has remained in double figures. Unfortunately, this is not good news for the hard-pressed consumer who is bearing the brunt of high services level of inflation. While the Bank of England was the first of the main central banks to start hiking rates at the end of 2021, their timidity in pushing rates higher since then has created a situation that has meant inflation is likely to remain higher for longer.

Contrast their position with that of the Federal Reserve which started hiking over three months later, and where headline rates are higher. Core inflation has also remained higher in the UK, staying at 6.2% instead of being expected to fall back to 6%. This situation has put the Bank of England in a tough spot, with Governor Andrew Bailey saying on several occasions that the MPC expects inflation to cool, and that the country needs to be careful about a wage-price spiral.

 

However, this sentiment comes across as tone-deaf when inflation is averaging over 10% a month and wages have lagged CPI since October 2021. One factor that likely explains the resilience of the UK economy recently is how wages managed to outperform inflation in the lead-up to the rise in energy prices that started to manifest themselves at the end of 2021, helping to build a bit of a buffer as prices began surging.

Nonetheless, all this talk of a wage-price spiral is a red herring and a complete distraction when headline inflation is still well above the level of average wage growth. The Bank of England needs to worry less about wages and get on with its core job of controlling inflation.

It strains credibility that there remains a minority cohort on the MPC who believe that rates have risen far enough, and the next move is likely to be a rate cut. While that cohort will reduce in July when Silvana Tenreyro leaves the MPC, it doesn’t change the fact that the central bank has failed in its primary function of getting on top of inflation.

 

There does seem to be the beginnings of an acknowledgement from some members of the MPC that inflation could be much stickier when Bank of England chief economist Huw Pill said that UK inflation was proving to be much harder to bring under control than anticipated in comments made earlier this month.

 

Sadly, this isn’t news to people who have been watching the UK economy over the years and feeling the effects in their pockets. Prices in the UK have always tended to go up like a rocket and come down like a feather, and it appears that is what is playing out right now.

Today’s inflation numbers mean that it’s more likely than not that we’ll see another 25 basis points rate hike from the Bank of England when they next meet in May, which will probably keep us in line with the US Federal Reserve, who are also expected to raise rates at the same time. As a result of today’s numbers, UK 2 and 5-year gilt yields have pushed higher, although they are still below their highs for the year, while the pound edged higher, although it still hasn’t managed to crack the 1.2500 area against the US dollar with any conviction.

More importantly, it’s unlikely that inflation will fall quickly given the further price rises consumers are seeing this month in the form of higher council tax bills, as well as other utilities like broadband and mobile phone charges which have gone up in line with RPI. Overall, the Bank of England needs to take a more proactive approach to controlling inflation and ensure that it stays within reasonable limits, to prevent further harm to the UK economy and its citizens.

online sources:theguardian.com, bbc.co.uk, thebankofengland.co.uk