UK inflation hits five-year high of 3% as food prices rise

The squeeze on households intensified last month as the cost of living increased at the steepest rate since April 2012.

A shopping trolley
Image: Food prices were one of the main contributors to the rise in inflation
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Inflation rose to 3% in September, its highest level in more than five years, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said.

The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation rose from 2.9% in August thanks partly to higher food prices - adding to the squeeze on households as pay growth lags behind.

But the increase will be welcomed by those receiving the state pension, as the September figure is used to calculate increases in the benefit next April under the Government's "triple lock" guarantee.

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What's caused the rise in inflation?

It is the first time CPI inflation has reached 3% since April 2012. The Bank of England targets inflation at 2%.

The CPI figure - which was in line with expectations - should bolster expectations that the Bank will hike interest rates next month, though some have cautioned against such a move at a time of tepid economic growth.

A slump in the pound since the Brexit vote last year, which makes imports more expensive, has contributed to rising inflation, though the ONS said increasing global commodity prices could also be a factor.

Bank of England governor Mark Carney told MPs on the Treasury Select Committee that a rise in inflation to more than 3% had been anticipated.

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The 'trade-off' facing Bank on rates

He said: "We had signalled prior to the referendum that in the event of a vote to leave... we expected sterling to fall sharply - it did. That passes through to prices."

Despite the rise in inflation, the pound slipped by nearly a cent against the US dollar to less than $1.32 on Tuesday - after the Bank's new deputy governor Sir David Ramsden told the same committee that he was not close to voting for an interest rate hike.

The latest ONS data showed food and non-alcoholic beverage prices were climbing at the highest rate since October 2013.

Computer games, together with a change in the way the ONS accounts for air fares in inflation data, also contributed to the rise in inflation, as did an increase in fuel prices.

Clothing costs, which rose by less than they did in the same period last year, had a downward effect.

Inflation has been running well ahead of wage rises, which according to latest official data were just above 2%.

The TUC called on the Government to "face up to Britain's cost of living crisis" and give five million public sector workers "the pay rise they have earned".

The Treasury pointed to actions it has taken to help families, such as a freeze on fuel duty, increased free childcare and the national living wage.

Kallum Pickering, senior UK economist at Berenberg, said there was "light at the end of the tunnel" and that households could be past the worst of the real wage squeeze with inflation likely to trend downwards over coming months, and wages likely to strengthen.

For pensioners, the uptick in inflation helps, as the Government has committed to increasing the state pension by 2.5%, earnings growth, or CPI inflation in September; whichever is higher.

But there was a blow for businesses as the separate Retail Price Index (RPI) measure of inflation, which includes owner-occupier housing costs, was unchanged at 3.9% - its highest level since the start of 2012.

The figure will be used to calculate next April's increase in business rates, prompting calls for a rates freeze and a warning from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) that many shops could be left "struggling to survive".