Christmas cheer as inflation falls
Responding to the latest CPI inflation figures which show headline inflation falling to 3.9% and food inflation falling 0.9 percentage points to 9.2%. Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, said: “Inflation continued to fall as fierce competition between retailers helped hold down prices for consumers. With the eighth consecutive fall in food inflation and continued easing in clothing and footwear inflation, retailers are clearly working hard to deliver an affordable Christmas for households everywhere. Foods that saw falling prices included some dairy products such as eggs and butter, where lower energy prices fed through to supermarket shelves, while the price of bread and cereals and pork also fell. Meanwhile, sugar prices rose susbstantially due to lower supplies from dry harvests. Washing machines and cookers fell in price thanks to extensive Black Friday sales.
“ There are many risks on the horizon for inflation in 2024. In April, retailers face higher business rates – costing retailers hundreds of millions – new EU border checks, and an increase to the National Living Wage. To keep inflation falling, it is vital that government considers the cumulative impact of their policies – from its proposed deposit return scheme to its new packaging levy – or the rising cost of doing business will undoubtedly filter back through to inflation.”