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UK inflation in surprise increase in March

Simon Ward
by Lovemoney Staff Simon Ward on 17 April 2012  |  Comments 14 comments

Food and clothing price inflation has pushed the annual Consumer Prices Index measure of inflation up this month.

UK inflation in surprise increase in March

There was a surprise increase in annual inflation in March, as measured by the Consumer Prices Index (CPI), according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

CPI inflation increased to 3.5% from 3.4% in February. Many experts had predicted that this rate of inflation would stay the same.

The main reason for the increase was a rise in food price inflation. This increased as a result of many supermarkets offering discounts on food items in March last year. This year, prices for foods as diverse as breakfast cereals, frozen pizzas, meat pies, strawberries and grapes have risen.

Clothing price inflation has also risen, particularly for men’s jeans, jumper and sweatshirts, women’s formal jackets, long-sleeved tops, cardigans and casual trousers, and children’s school trousers.

The prices of products such as personal computers, laptops, DVDs and games have also increased.

Recent price reductions in gas and electricity bills contributed the largest downward effect on annual inflation.

And fuels and lubricants inflation actually fell slightly, due to diesel prices increasing by an average of 2.6p a litre between February and March this year, compared with a rise of 4.3p this time last year.

That’s despite both diesel and petrol prices hitting record levels during March, in part due to retailers pushing prices up as people went panic buying because of the threat of a strike by fuel tanker drivers.

RPI inflation falls

Meanwhile, the Retail Prices Index measure of inflation fell from 3.7% in February to 3.6% in March.

Again, gas, electricity and oil prices were significant contributors to this fall. But the biggest downward effect came from a decrease in the prices of vehicles and a drop in car insurance premiums.

These motoring costs are not included in the CPI measure of inflation.

The figures mean the Bank of England’s Governor Sir Mervyn King will be writing another letter to the Chancellor. It also means another round of quantitative easing, where the Bank pumps money into the economy, is less likely in the short term.

Figures from financial data provider Moneyfacts show that £10,000 invested in a savings account in 2007, allowing for average interest and tax at 20%, would have the spending power of just £9,204 today.

Do these figures match your experiences of inflation in your daily life? Let us know in the Comments section below.

Ways to combat inflation:
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Comments (14)

  • Iamcoldsteve
    Love rating 308
    Iamcoldsteve said

    I've just had a 5% pay rise and a bonus. Nice.

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • OorWullie
    Love rating 38
    OorWullie said

    Those figures certainly do match and have seriously impacted on my experience. Two years ago I had between £500 to £700 at the end of each month remaining in my account. Today, this remaining sum no longer exists! The problem is not the increase in the cost-of-living but the devaluation of the currency brought about by the misleading term 'quantitative easing'. In the government's creative accounting style and that of being economical with the truth it changed the wording of devaluation to that of 'quantitative easing'. When previously the pound was devalued the public rebelled but today with the new term of 'quantitative easing' few probably understand its meaning nor impact. To make fiat money is harmful to the economy and its impact is slow at showing and it is too easy for the government to project the blame elsewhere. The government should try to be honest, candid, and open, yet to do so would mean the end of its term in office and hence the games it plays. As the late Robin Day described politicians, 'the here today gone tomorrow brigade' or the Teflon-clean operators!

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • silkycat
    Love rating 37
    silkycat said

    Lamcoldsteve is obviously one of the lucky ones and must be working in the private sector. Public sector workers are into their 3rd year of frozen pay, coupled with increased work loads due to large scale redundancies, increased pension contributions and reduced benefits, and other reductions in pay and conditions. Of course they still have that 'gold plated' pension should their jobs last long enough, currently averaging at around £5k per year - reducing at a rate of 3.5% per anum with inflation.

    Yachts all round - I think not!

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Mike10613
    Love rating 599
    Mike10613 said

    The only people surprised by the inflation figures are the 'experts'. Oorwullie is right about quantitative easing devaluing the currency. The Chinese have done it to help exports and the Eurozone devalues the Euro with it's version. The American print money and we copy them. It's a shame Greece can't print a load of its own money too. Commodity prices will rise so expect to see gold go up, oil go up, gas go up and yet more price rises on food; especially hot pasties...

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • Iamcoldsteve
    Love rating 308
    Iamcoldsteve said

    Yes, private sector and no not lucky - I have previously and I continue to just work hard and get the reward for that hard work over the many years I have been working.

    By the way, it is Iamcoldsteve and not Lamcoldsteve

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  • nickpike
    Love rating 270
    nickpike said

    Whose surprised? QE causes inflation. Thanks Merv for robbing the responsible to look after the indebted who spend more than they can afford. This is all going to end in tears for a lot of people who are in debt.

    Iamcoldsteve

    You haven't had a pay rise, you have had an inflation rise. Inflation is a lot more than the official figure, so really you will only be able to buy the same amount of goods/ services as before, so it is not a relative rise in pay, well, not as much as you think anyway.

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  • GaryDean
    Love rating 56
    GaryDean said

    Today we did less than our usual weekly shop. We spent £150. (we have 4 kids). We are by no means extravagant but every week we note that something has increased in price & unreasonably so (i.e. I saw shaving cream in Superdrug for £4.25???!!!). We are careful shoppers using three different stores to get the cheapest prices. We no longer use Tesco's, for example, as some of their prices have become too high to the point where there is not enough in the way of value to lure us in & their fuel is no longer the cheapest.

    From my perpective it would appear the people heading up utility, fuel & food companies etc. are not only enjoying ,in some cases, record profits but are not at all happy unless they can make more. If their profits fall below those of the year before it's headline news. Well, there is only so much they can squeeze from an already overburdened public.

    Put simply this inflation is fuelled by greed.

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Offa
    Love rating 40
    Offa said

    The inflation will not fall in the foreseeable future as it is like a drug to teeh government. They have removed many RPI linked 'benefits' replaced by them with CPI linked ones and I am very pleased to see that CPI is higher than RPI. How long before the government change the rules agian? Not long ,as they are a bunch of swindlers that are feathering their own nest.

    Our economy is largely based on passing money round a series of merchants that take a cut. This will lead to reducing living standards for very many people . teh only ones to benefit will be those taking tehcut and those running PFI schemes that milk the taxpayers to provide bonuses for teh private sector. Just wait until the privatised health service is really up and running- do not become old or become ill under Cameron.

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  • Iamcoldsteve
    Love rating 308
    Iamcoldsteve said

    Nickpike, I do understand pay, inflation etc.

    Still nice though to get a rise, and was a bit of a surprise.

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • electricblue
    Love rating 643
    electricblue said

    @Offa -

    Can you sit and talk at the same time? A lot more nest feathering went on under the last government, especially the fat crook Prescott and his family who are hated with a passion in this area by anyone with two brain cells. I've lived on savings for the last three years building a business which is now at last showing a massive growth in sales and will justify my sacrifices. I've no sympathy for the whiners and moaners on here. If you are an employee then suck it up and get on with your life. You didn't take the risks of running a business and live on nothing when things were really bad. I'm also an expert bargain shopper and eat better for less money than ever and much as I hate the cost of fuel I just run a smaller car and get on with life.

    Report on 17 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • John Fitzsimons
    Love rating 30
    John Fitzsimons said

    Can we all play nice please? It's possible to take different sides in an argument without resorting to daft personal digs

    John

    Editor

    Report on 18 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • nickpike
    Love rating 270
    nickpike said

    GaryDean

    Your comment prompted me to consider out weekly shopping bill. About 5 years ago we spent (for 2 of us, the offspring are self sufficient now, thank god) about £75 a week but now it's about £125. That's a massive increase. We have even found a guy who sells eggs and veggies from his front garden, nice quality and cheap. The green grocer we used went out of business. Come to think of it, the butcher shut shop as well. Signs of the times.

    Food was always going to go up when the pound was devalued by 33%. Imported food (there's loads from abroad in the supermarkets) and energy just got more expensive.

    Not just food. I want to build a new computer. I was waiting for prices of components to drop as the technology got older, but prices just keep going up. Not seen this before.

    I thing the UK is going to be in big trouble soon. We have the highest levels of government and private debt, and reading two days ago that our banks are the most indebted as well. It will end in tears. We also don't manufacture enough of our own stuff.

    I'm prepared to give UKIP a try next. The rest have failed.

    Report on 21 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • OorWullie
    Love rating 38
    OorWullie said

    I reside in a semi-rural area and the local fresh meat butcher was lamenting at the recently rapid increase in the price of cattle for slaughter at the auction market which, of course, in turn, reflects in his prices. Presumably, from this, the cost of rearing animals has increased. Inflation is obviously a spiral in which we cannot seem to dislodge ourselves.

    Report on 21 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • develyn
    Love rating 7
    develyn said

    There should not be any surprise about this. When you print money you get inflation - only this government calls it Quantitative Easing. And who is hit worst: pensioners and others on fixed incomes because the value of the pound is being eroded and there is a miserly return on your savings.

    Report on 21 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love

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