Shop Price annual inflation remained unchanged at 0.2% in July according to figures out this morning from the British Retail Consortium

Its  annual growth remained at its lowest rate since October 2021 but it has been held down by falls in the cost of non-food items as food prices continued to rise

Food prices rose by 2.3%, the smallest increase since December 2021, while non-food prices dropped by 0.9%.

Helen Dickinson, Chief Executive of the British Retail Consortium, said:
“Shop Price Inflation in July remained unchanged on the previous month. Non-food price deflation continued, albeit at a slower rate than June. Holiday makers could pick up bargain summer wear and summer reads as clothing and footwear prices fell for the seventh consecutive month amidst persistent weak demand, and the prices of books fell. The 2023 declines in global food commodity prices continued to feed through, helping bring down food inflation rates over the first seven months of 2024. However this shows signs of reversing, suggesting renewed pressure on food prices in the future. Sports gatherings for Wimbledon and the Euros benefitted from discounted snacking items such as crisps and soft drinks.

“UK households suffered from high levels of inflation in 2022 and 2023 and can celebrate inflation levels returning to normal over the first half of this year. But, with the outlook for commodity prices remaining uncertain due to the impact of climate change on harvests domestically and globally, as well as rising geopolitical tensions, renewed inflationary pressures could be lurking just over the horizon.”

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