The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pasta up 50% as food staple prices spiral

- AUGUST GRAHAM

The price of the cheapest pasta in UK supermarke­ts increased by half in just a year as households deal with runaway inflation.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said that pasta prices rose 50% between April last year and April this year.

It tracked the increases in the price of the lowestcost items in supermarke­ts.

Statistici­ans chose 30 everyday items that they know the least well-off households regularly buy to get an idea of how inflation is hitting these households.

They trained algorithms to select the cheapest possible alternativ­es on the websites of Asda, the Co-op, Iceland, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s, Tesco and Waitrose, and tracked its price over the year.

Despite Aldi and Lidl being among the cheapest supermarke­ts in the country they were not included as they do not allow customers to shop online.

The data found that pasta prices rose at the fastest rate, followed by crisps (17%), bread (16%), minced beef (16%) and rice (15%).

Falls were seen in the price of potatoes (14%), cheese (7%), pizza (4%), chips (3%), sausages (3%) and apples (1%).

It comes as experts recently warned that the poorest households in the country are bearing the brunt of the cost of living crisis.

While inflation hit a 40-year high of 9% in April as measured by the Consumer Prices Index, those who are least well off spend a larger proportion of their income on the basics, such as energy bills.

As a result, the Institute for Fiscal Studies has suggested that inflation for the poorest households ran at 10.9% in the year to April.

The latest ONS analysis indicates that, at least for the 30 items it chose, inflation for the cheapest alternativ­es has been running similar to overall food and alcohol prices, increasing by between 6% and 7%.

However, it does not take into account the costs associated with buying a product.

For instance, potato prices have dropped significan­tly over the last year, but many struggling households avoid potatoes, because they take longer to boil than alternativ­es and therefore use more expensive gas.

The ONS acknowledg­ed that because the analysis only focuses on the lowestpric­ed goods, the estimates are based on a very small number of price quotes.

It also does not mitigate the concerns of food campaigner Jack Monroe who has criticised supermarke­ts for allegedly limiting access to their cheapest products in store.

“The available products represent the retailer’s online catalogue, rather than the range of products available or bought in local stores that month,” the ONS said.

 ?? ?? HEATING UP: Pasta prices have increased by half over the last year, the study showed.
HEATING UP: Pasta prices have increased by half over the last year, the study showed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom