Western Daily Press

Inflation soaring as fuel and energy prices surge

- HOLLY WILLIAMS business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

UK inflation has jumped to a near-decade high as soaring energy and fuel prices pushed up the cost of living, according to official figures.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the rate of Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation rose sharply from 3.1% in September to 4.2% last month – the highest level since December 2011 and a biggerthan-expected jump.

It comes after gas and electricit­y prices have surged, with regulator Ofgem last month increasing the energy price cap by 12%. But the figures also show sharp fuel costs rises and inflation building across food, household goods and hospitalit­y as supply chain disruption takes its toll.

The Bank of england warned earlier this month that inflation will rocket to its highest level for 10 years and that it is likely to hike interest rates in the “coming months” to try and bring CPI back to its 2% target.

It is forecastin­g CPI will reach 4.5% in November and hit around 5% next April, the highest level since 2011.

Grant Fitzner, chief economist at the ONS, said: “Inflation rose steeply in October to its highest rate in nearly a decade.

“This was driven by increased household energy bills due to the price cap hike, a rise in the cost of second-hand cars and fuel as well as higher prices in restaurant­s and hotels. Costs of goods produced by factories and the price of raw materials have also risen substantia­lly and are now at their highest rates for at least 10 years.”

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said: “Many countries are experienci­ng higher inflation as we recover from Covid and we know people are facing pressures with the cost of living, which is why we are taking action worth more than £4.2 billion to help them.”

The ONS data showed that despite the Government’s energy price cap, 12-month inflation rates have leapt to 18.8% for electricit­y and 28.1% for gas – the highest annual rates since early 2009.

Prices on forecourts also raced higher last month, with fuel panicbuyin­g amid supply disruption in late September and early October sending petrol and diesel spiking higher amid wider ongoing rises in the global cost of oil.

The ONS said average petrol prices hit their highest since September 2012, at 138.6 pence per litre in October compared with 113.2 pence per litre a year earlier.

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