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British inflation hits four-year low on oil price fall, Covid-19 impact

| Updated: June 20, 2020 14:16:22


File photo (collected) File photo (collected)

British inflation fell to its lowest since June 2016 last month as the coronavirus pandemic sucked demand from the global economy and oil prices tumbled.

Consumer price inflation slowed to 0.5 per cent from April’s 0.8 per cent, the Office for National Statistics said, in line with the average forecast in a Reuters poll of economists.

“There was a continued drop in prices at the pump in May, following the huge crude price falls seen in recent months,” ONS Deputy National Statistician Jonathan Athow said.

Core inflation — which excludes typically volatile energy, food, alcohol and tobacco prices — showed less of a decline, falling to 1.2 per cent from April’s 1.4 per cent, reports Reuters.

The BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee is expected to announce an extra 100 billion pounds of bond purchases on Thursday, following on from 200 billion pounds of bond purchases it started in March.

Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics forecast that inflation would hover around zero for the rest of the year.

 “The outlook for extremely low inflation, then, fully justifies the MPC announcing more quantitative easing at tomorrow’s meeting,” he said.

Britain’s economy suffered a record slump of more than 20 per cent in April due to the closure of non-essential businesses to the public to slow the spread of Covid-19.

Last month the BoE said weaker demand, lower oil prices and a regulatory cap on household energy and water bills, were likely to keep inflation below 1.0 per cent for several months.

The ONS was unable to collect prices on 14 per cent of the goods and services it normally would because of the lockdown — including drinks at pubs, haircuts and foreign holidays — though some items such as takeaway coffee did become available again.

Major factors pushing down on inflation in May included fuel, clothing and transport costs.

Prices for fuel and lubricants showed their biggest annual fall on record, down 16.7 per cent, while clothing prices were 3.1 per cent lower, the biggest drop since July 2010.

Prices fell for toys and games after they spiked in April as families looked for new ways to keep themselves entertained.

Producer output prices — which can give a steer on upcoming price pressures — dropped by a greater-than-expected 1.4 per cent after declining by 0.7 per cent in April.

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