Consumers under pressure as UK inflation continues to rise

Households are likely to cut back spending as they feel the squeeze.

05-16-2017
Airplane-taking-off

Authors

Azad Zangana
Senior European Economist and Strategist

More bad news for UK households. The annual rate of consumer price index (CPI) inflation rose from 2.3% in March to 2.7% in April – higher than consensus estimates of 2.6%.

Meanwhile, the retail price index (RPI) measure of inflation jumped from 3.1% to 3.5% over the same period, also slightly higher than consensus expectations.

Energy prices and sterling are driving inflation

Inflation has been rising in recent months due to energy price inflation dynamics, but also the fall in sterling, which is raising the prices of imported goods and services. According to the latest producer price index data, input prices are still rising by 16.6% year-on-year, although that is down from the peak in recent months.

The input price data suggests that producers have seen the peak in the cost inflation that they face. Over the coming months, most of those costs will be passed on to consumers, most likely in the form of higher final prices, which will of course drive measures like the CPI and RPI higher still.

In fact, the Schroders forecast has headline UK CPI inflation rising above 3% by the end of the summer, before slowly coming back down over the second half of the year.

Consumers feel the pinch

Meanwhile, households are being squeezed. This was evident from the weakness in retail sales, and was hinted at by the fall in GDP growth published last month, with many of the consumer-facing sectors struggling.

Indeed, the governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, warned that average pay growth was unlikely to keep up with headline inflation in the near-term, but could catch up sometime next year. He mentioned Brexit uncertainty as a possible reason for subdued wage growth, but he thinks this could fade over time.

Easter effect on transport sector

Within the details of the report, the biggest contribution came from transport price inflation, where prices rose by 1.5% in April 2017 compared to a fall of 0.1% in April 2016. This is due to the changing month of the Easter holiday, which usually leads to a big jump in air fares and other transport prices.

Otherwise, clothing and footwear inflation rose by 1.1%, compared to a fall of 0.3% a year ago. To the downside, recreation and culture services inflation rose 0.2%, compared to 0.8% a year earlier – this could be a result of households cutting back on discretionary spending.

Economy to slow as households cut back

Overall, a small upside surprise to inflation, which does not change the story for the UK economy. Inflation is heading higher from here which will squeeze households further. With the savings rate at a record low, households are very likely to cut back spending, causing the economy to slow.

The views and opinions contained herein are those of Schroders’ investment teams and/or Economics Group, and do not necessarily represent Schroder Investment Management North America Inc.’s house views. These views are subject to change. This information is intended to be for information purposes only and it is not intended as promotional material in any respect.

Authors

Azad Zangana
Senior European Economist and Strategist

Topics

UK
Azad Zangana
Inflation
Growth
Economics
Central banks

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