Bristol Post

POUND NOTES

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UK INFLATION SLOWS ON BACK OF CHEAPER CLOTHING AND FOOD

UK inflation slowed down in November as clothing and food prices shrank amid tightened coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation decreased to 0.3% for the month, from 0.7% in October.

It was below the expectatio­ns of analysts, who had predicted that inflation would only dip to 0.6%.

ONS deputy national statistici­an for economic statistics Jonathan Athow said: “With significan­t restrictio­ns in place across the UK, inflation slowed, predominan­tly due to clothing and food prices.

“Also, after several months of buoyant growth, second-hand car prices fell back a little.”

The ONS said sliding clothing and footwear costs made the largest contributi­on to lower inflation, as shoppers saw prices which were 3.6% lower than in the same month last year.

It said this was driven by increased discountin­g as retailers sought to drive online sales ahead of Christmas while stores remained shut in England due to the second national lockdown. The ONS also highlighte­d speculatio­n that Black Friday sales were spread further across the month than in previous years.

Meanwhile, food and nonalcohol­ic drinks fell by 0.6% in the year to November as vegetables and confection­ery prices moved lower. Motor fuels also caused downward pressure on inflation, as fuel prices sank in November amid a fall in demand as the pandemic weighed on travel.

Restaurant and hotels were one of the few areas to have a positive contributi­on to inflation as prices were increased as the pandemic continued to hurt businessse­s.

The Retail Price Index (RPI), a separate measure of inflation, was 0.9% in November, falling from 1.3% in the previous month.

 ??  ?? Black Friday sales may have helped slow inflation
Black Friday sales may have helped slow inflation
 ??  ?? Motor fuel prices sank in November
Motor fuel prices sank in November

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