The Herald

Economists predict inflation will stay steady at 2.4%

- HELEN CAHILL

INFLATION is set to hold steady at 2.4 per cent when official data is published next week, despite a jump in oil prices contributi­ng to the cost of petrol rocketing.

A consensus of economists are predicting inflation to have held firm in May, even as petrol prices are expected to register the steepest month-on-month rise for seven years.

Oil prices were rising in May following US President Donald Trump’s decision to walk away from the Iran nuclear deal, raising the prospect of a disruption in supply from the Middle East. Brent crude is currently trading at around $76 per barrel, but almost touched $80 last month.

Some economists think inflation could go higher, with EY Item Club’s Howard Archer saying it could be as high as 2.6%, flagging higher pump prices.

“The RAC has reported that petrol prices rose by 6p a litre in May –the biggest monthly increase since the RAC began tracking prices 18 years ago,” he said.

“Average petrol prices hit 129.4p a litre, while average diesel prices also rose by 6p to 132.3p a litre.”

Victoria Clarke, economist at Investec, said: “We expect to see the largest recorded month-to-month rise in petrol and diesel prices since 2011, with this pushing up the 12-month inflation rate by some 0.15 percentage points.

“Secondly, airfares look set to return to follow their more predictabl­e seasonal pattern, with Easter behind us.”

Inflation unexpected­ly fell in April to its lowest level for more than a year, despite firms increasing prices on soft drinks after the introducti­on of the sugar tax.

Air fares were a significan­t downwards pressure on the rate of inflation due to the early timing of Easter, but households took a hit as electricit­y, gas and other fuel prices rose 5.7% annually.

With inflation remaining above the Bank of England’s 2% target, next week’s update could put pressure on the bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) to raise interest rates in August.

The bank backed away from a rise earlier in the year due to sluggish growth, keeping rates at 0.5%.

Adding further fuel to the case has been a trio of recent solid readings from the services, manufactur­ing and constructi­on sectors, which suggest the economy could grow by between 0.3% and 0.4% in the second quarter of this year.

 ??  ?? „ Petrol prices are expected to show steepest rise in seven years.
„ Petrol prices are expected to show steepest rise in seven years.

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