British inflation rate more than doubles to 1.5pc in April


FE Team | Published: May 19, 2021 15:58:37 | Updated: May 26, 2021 15:14:44


File photo, (Collected)

British consumer price inflation more than doubled in April at the start of what the Bank of England hopes will be a temporary surge as the economy recovers from last year's COVID slump.

Consumer prices rose by 1.5 per cent in April, the Office for National Statistics said, following a 0.7 per cent rise in March, reports Reuters.

A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to an increase of 1.4 per cent.

A jump in regulated electricity and gas bills and clothing and footwear prices helped to push inflation up, along with the cost of petrol, hit by rising global oil prices.

Inflation is expected to accelerate in the coming months - mirroring a move underway in the United States as the global economy picks itself up after the COVID-19 pandemic.

"With inflation set to pick up further over the coming months and the economy looking poised for decent recovery from the second quarter, attention is increasingly focusing on when the Bank of England could start to tighten monetary policy rather than will the Bank provide further stimulus," Howard Archer, an economist with forecaster EY Item Club said.

"However the Bank of England did not appear to be in a hurry to tighten policy in the minutes of the May MPC meeting."

Core inflation, which excludes energy prices and other volatile items, rose by 1.3 per cent in the 12 months to April, the Office for National Statistics said.

The BoE says inflation in Britain is heading above its 2.0 per cent target and will hit 2.5 per cent at the end of 2021 thanks to the rise in global oil prices and the expiry in September of COVID emergency cuts to value-added tax in the hospitality sector, as well as comparisons with the COVID slump of 2020.

The BoE thinks inflation will then slip back to 2.0 per cent in 2022 and 2023.

Wednesday's data showed prices charged by manufacturers rose by 3.9 per cent in the year to April, the biggest increase in two-and-a-half years, and the prices they paid for their inputs rose by 9.9%, the most since February 2017.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said on Tuesday there had been little sign so far that these producer cost pressures had fed much into consumer prices in Britain.

Last week, data showed U.S. consumer prices jumped to an annual rate of 4.2 per cent in April, the strongest inflation rate since 2008, prompting investors to up their bets on the Federal Reserve raising interest rates sooner than it had signalled.

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