logo
Food inflation rises for fourth consecutive month

Food inflation rises for fourth consecutive month

Independent26-05-2025

Food inflation rose for the fourth consecutive month in May, with wholesale meat prices increasing the cost of steak on supermarket shelves, latest figures show.
Shop prices overall remained in deflation, at 0.1% cheaper than a year ago and unchanged from April, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC)-NIQ Shop Price Index.
Non-food deflation dropped further to 1.5% against April's 1.4%.
However this slowed in categories such as fashion and furniture as retailers began to unwind heavy promotional activity.
Meanwhile, prices fell faster for electricals as retailers tried to encourage spending before any potential knock-on impact from US tariffs, the BRC said.
However food prices are now 2.8% higher than a year ago, up from April's 2.6%.
Fresh food prices are rising particularly quickly, up to 2.4% higher than last May from April's 1.8%.
Ambient food inflation fell to 3.3% from April's 3.6%.
BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson said: 'While overall shop prices remain unchanged in May, food inflation rose for the fourth consecutive month.
'Fresh foods were the main driver, and red meat eaters may have noticed their steak got a little more expensive as wholesale beef prices increased.
'With retailers now absorbing the additional £5 billion in costs from April's increased employer national insurance contributions and national living wage, it is no surprise that inflation is rearing its head once again.
'Later this year, retailers face another £2 billion in costs from the new packaging tax, and there are further employment costs on the horizon from the implementation of the Employment Rights Bill. Government must ensure the Employment Rights Bill is fit for purpose, supporting workers' rights while protecting jobs and investment for growth.
'If statutory costs continue to rise for retailers, households will have to brace themselves for more difficult times ahead as prices rise faster.'
Mike Watkins, head of retailer and business insight at NielsenIQ, said: 'Whilst shoppers are seeing savings at the checkout as retailers increase promotional activity, increasing prices is still an extra challenge to consumer spending alongside rising household bills.
'If consumer confidence remain weak as looks likely, then retailers may have to work harder to encourage shoppers to spend over the summer.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Labour battles over housing budget as experts warn crisis will get worse
Labour battles over housing budget as experts warn crisis will get worse

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Labour battles over housing budget as experts warn crisis will get worse

Experts warn of a deepening of the UK's housing crisis due to potential government spending cuts, with funds expected to be stretched by 2026. A struggle is reportedly occurring between the Treasury and housing minister Angela Rayner over budget plans, as Rachel Reeves prepares to outline spending plans until the next election. The Local Government Association reports that over half of councils are running deficits on their housing budgets, while homeless charities warn that new social housing supply cannot keep up with demand. Housing associations are struggling with the cumulative effects of austerity budgets, the Grenfell fire tragedy, and the economic impact of Brexit, Covid-19, and the war in Ukraine, leading to a shortage of funds for new projects. Homeless charities are calling for 90,000 new social housing homes to be built per year, while Labour MPs express concern that cuts to social housing will undermine the party's housing pledge and negatively impact councils.

Government struggles to slash foreign aid spent on asylum hotels
Government struggles to slash foreign aid spent on asylum hotels

Sky News

time29 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Government struggles to slash foreign aid spent on asylum hotels

The government is struggling to cut the billions of pounds of foreign aid partly used to house asylum seekers in hotels, according to new figures. The £2.2bn Home Office estimate to spend £2.2bn of overseas development assistance (ODA) in this financial year is only slightly less than the £2.3bn spent in 2024/25. The vast majority is used for the accommodation for asylum seekers who have arrived in the UK, with recent figures showing more than 32,000 were being housed in hotels at the end of March. Labour has pledged "to end the use of asylum hotels" and the government says it has reduced the overall asylum support costs by half a billion pounds, including £200m in ODA savings, which had been passed back to the Treasury. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has said he will cut the overall ODA from its current level of 0.5% of gross national income (GNI) to 0.3% in 2027. Foreign aid is supposed to be spent on providing humanitarian and development assistance in other countries, but the UK is allowed to count refugee-hosting costs as ODA under internationally agreed rules. Labour MP Sarah Champion previously said a "scandalously large amount" of ODA has been diverted to the Home Office and has called for a cap on how much can be spent supporting asylum seekers and refugees in the UK. Asylum seekers and their families are housed in temporary accommodation if they are waiting for the outcome of a claim or an appeal and have been assessed as not being able to support themselves independently. They are housed in hotels if there is not enough space in accommodation provided by local authorities or other organisations. A Home Office spokesperson said: "We inherited an asylum system under exceptional pressure, and are urgently taking action to restore order, and reduce costs. "This will ultimately reduce the amount of Official Development Assistance spent to support asylum seekers and refugees in the UK. "We are immediately speeding up decisions and increasing returns so that we can end the use of hotels and save the taxpayer £4bn by 2026."

Chester-le-Street's post office temporarily saved from closure
Chester-le-Street's post office temporarily saved from closure

BBC News

time34 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Chester-le-Street's post office temporarily saved from closure

A high street post office, which is one of only a handful to feature the cypher of Edward VIII, has been temporarily saved from Front Street branch in Chester-le-Street, County Durham, was among 115 to be put at risk as part of a business restructure. The Post Office has now confirmed the branch will be taken over by franchisee Richard Fleetwood who already runs sites in Newcastle, Hebburn and Washington. It said the branch would continue to operate on the same site until "long-term arrangements" were finalised. North Durham Labour MP Luke Akehurst said he had been told any move to a new location was unlikely to happen before spring 2026 and this would be subject to a local public previously said the building, which dates back to 1936, holds "historical significance" due to its links with the king who was never crowned and who abdicated later that year to marry Wallis shake-up of the Post Office's branch network was revealed by the company's chairman Nigel Railton in government-owned business has 11,500 branches across the most sites are franchises, 108 of them are currently owned directly by the was feared some branches would be permanently shut but in April the firm announced the sites would be taken over by franchisees subject to government funding. Other Crown Post Offices being taken over by Mr Fleetwood in north-east England include branches in South Shields and Sunderland.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store