Bank ignores calls to cut interest rates
Inflation soared to a new record in September after gas and electricity price hikes, official figures showed today.
The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) reached 5.2% last month - the highest CPI reading since 1997 and a 16-year historical inflation peak.
But the Government also faces paying out billions more in benefits and pensions after the headline Retail Prices Index (RPI) reached 5%.
September's RPI - which was last higher in July 1991 - is commonly used by the Government to calculate pension increases for the coming year.
Pensions usually increase by 2.5% or headline RPI, whichever is higher.
The headline RPI, less costs such as rent, council tax and mortgage interest payments, is also used to calculate increases in benefits such as Jobseeker's Allowance and income support under the Rossi Index.
Today's CPI figures are likely to mark an inflation peak as policymakers on the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) - who cut rates by 0.5% last week - turn their attention towards avoiding a severe recession following the current financial turmoil.
But the data will also serve as warning of a residual inflation threat for MPC, which did not have access to the figures before cutting rates last Wednesday.
Following the price hikes for gas and electricity - and an earlier round of increases in January - electricity prices are up 30.3% year on year, with gas costs up almost 50%.
The annual rate of inflation for energy and other household bills reached 15% - the highest since 1989, while price rises for clothing, footwear, toys and games added to the pressure.
But there was some better news for inflation watchers as food inflation slowed for the first time since March, largely due to unchanged milk prices last month compared with a 4p rise a year earlier. Meat prices however continued to rise, with bacon almost 20% dearer than a year earlier.
As crude oil prices fall, the average price of petrol also fell by an average 1.7p a litre between August and September, compared with a smaller decline a year earlier.
Tony Woodley, joint general secretary of Unite said: "Much of the blame for this latest jump in the cost of living sits firmly at the door of the greedy energy companies. At the end of the summer consumers were knocked sideways by ransom demand fuel bills dropping through their letter boxes.
"It is simply not right that fuel companies are sitting on soaraway profits while households wrestle with a desperate choice of whether to heat or eat. Energy windfall profits should be redirected to give six million homes an immediate £250 each this winter to pay for essentials like heating. The oil and energy companies would not even notice it was missing.
"But we also need action now to address the poverty pay of millions of workers in this country, including public sector workers who are facing a wage cut this year.
“Putting some money in their pockets, in the form of a living wage rise, would benefit the entire economy and ease the burden for those who strive to keep our schools, hospitals and essential services running."
The UK's most up-to-date social housing and public sector news website

COMMENTS
No comments yet...
Be the first and post your views below.
Please Login to comment
To comment you must be logged in. You can either Login or Register