Commenting on the inflation statistics for September 2018,
published today by the Office for National Statistics, Suren Thiru,
Head of Economics at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said:
“Inflation slowed for the first time since April, with food and
non-alcoholic drinks placing the largest downward pressure on
price growth in September.
“Inflation’s trajectory is likely to fluctuate somewhat over the
coming months as downward momentum from a more subdued economy
trades off against upward pressure from the persistent weakness
in sterling. The pick-up in producer prices indicates that there
are still substantial supply chain price pressures. Businesses
continue to report that the cost of imported raw materials remain
significant, which could increase consumer prices again in the
short-term as these high input costs pass through supply chains.
“Inflation’s path back to the Bank of England’s 2% inflation
target is likely to be slow. We currently expect that inflation
will not return back to target until the end of 2019. However,
with the upward pressure on inflation largely temporary, there
remains sufficient scope to keep interest rates on hold for some
time, particularly during this period of heightened uncertainty.
“Against this backdrop, the Autumn Budget must include measures
to address the escalating burden of up-front taxes and costs
associated with doing business in the UK to give firms the
headroom needed to adjust to Brexit and to invest, recruit and
grow.”