The Guardian

Small fall in inflation ‘on track’, says Bank of England governor

- Larry Elliott Washington Richard Partington

The Bank of England governor, Andrew Bailey, last night shrugged off a smaller than expected drop in inflation last month, saying he expected a sharp fall towards the government’s 2% target next month.

Speaking in Washington after news that the government’s preferred measure of the cost of living had eased to 3.2% in March, Bailey said the path of inflation was broadly in line with what the Bank had predicted in its quarterly health check on the economy.

Financial markets had predicted a bigger drop in the annual rate to 3.1% and saw the latest data on price pressures as putting back the timing of interest rate cuts.

Bailey said: “We are pretty much on track with where we thought we would be – a bit under in February and a bit over in the latest figures. Next month will see quite a strong drop.”

While the UK was experienci­ng strong disinflati­on – a drop in the inflation rate – the governor said the fall was unbalanced. He said that April is likely to see household energy bills 25% lower than a year earlier, but service sector inflation is running at 6%. Decisions on interest rates would be influenced by service sector inflation, earnings growth and the state of the labour market, he said.

“It looks like we are getting a loosening of the labour market,” Bailey said, following this week’s news of a rise in the unemployme­nt rate to 4.2%. “But we are disinflati­ng at full employment.”

Bailey’s comments followed the release of data showing the annual inflation rate at its lowest level since September 2021 – helped by food prices increasing more slowly than a year earlier.

Jeremy Hunt said: “The plan is working: inflation is … down from

3n.2% d over 11% to , the lowest level in nearly two and a half years, helping people’s money go further.”

Speaking in Washington last night, the chancellor said the economy had achieved a “soft landing” and had been transforme­d since Rishi Sunak became prime minister.

Hunt said that when he arrived at the Treasury in late 2022 the Bank of England was predicting the longest recession in 100 years and the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity was expecting a record drop in living standards. “It looks like we have achieved a soft landing,” Hunt said. “Living standards have risen not fallen.”

Investors reacted to the March figure by trimming bets for an imminent reduction in borrowing costs, with the money markets now pricing in the first quarter-point rate cut in September or November. A matter of weeks ago investors had been expecting a first cut in June.

The Bank has raised interest rates to 5.25% as it tries to bring CPI inflation back down to its target of 2%. However, yesterday Megan Greene, an independen­t economist on the Bank’s nine-strong rate-setting committee, told an event in Washington that recent tensions in the Middle East could threaten achieving that aim, including by heightenin­g inflation expectatio­ns.

“I do think that what’s going on in the Middle East does pose a risk,” Greene told the Institute of Internatio­nal Finance.

“I’m worried about the sort of an energy price shock and other supply side shock, which obviously follow a number of supply side shocks we’ve seen over the past couple of years, and what that might do to inflation expectatio­ns.”

The Office for National Statistics said cooling inflation in food and drink prices contribute­d most to the decline, after a fall in the prices of bakery products, including chocolate biscuits and crumpets. But this was offset by rising fuel prices and stubbornly high inflation in services prices. A reduction in the rate of inflation does not mean prices are falling, just that they are rising more slowly.

The latest snapshot showed consumer prices continued to rise across a broad range of categories, including car insurance soaring by almost 30% compared with a year earlier. The cost of mobile phone and broadband packages shot up, while prices of hotel rooms and the price of beer and other alcoholic drinks also rose.

Rachel Reeves, the shadow chancellor, said the figures showed households remained worse off. “Prices are still high in the shops, monthly mortgage bills are going up and inflation is still higher than the Bank of England’s target,” she said.

 ?? Source: ONS ??
Source: ONS
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: TOLGA AKMEN/EPA ?? The bread counter at supermarke­t Lidl: bakery product price drops have contribute­d to cooling food inflation
PHOTOGRAPH: TOLGA AKMEN/EPA The bread counter at supermarke­t Lidl: bakery product price drops have contribute­d to cooling food inflation

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