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UK’s rich and poor face similar inflation – but different economic pain

uk rich inflation economy britain

Britain’s rich and poor alike are experiencing surges in inflation, official data showed on Friday, although soaring food and energy prices mean low-income households stand less chance of avoiding the hit from rising prices.

Consumer prices rose in annual terms by 5.4 per cent last month, the highest rate in almost 30 years – making inflation a hot political topic. Some campaigners say the latest figure understates the true cost increases faced by the poorest families.

New figures published by the Office for National Statistics suggest both low- and high-income households face similar inflation to the headline rate – although the analysis was unable to take account of changed spending patterns during the pandemic or differences in the quality of food bought.

The ONS said low-income households experienced annual consumer price inflation of 5.3 per cent in December, while high-income households faced inflation of 5.5 per cent. The data showed there has been little to separate the two groups since 2014.

However, analysts said inflation for poorer Britons could overtake that of their richer peers this year.

“While the new ONS figures confirm that the average inflation rates experienced by different income groups are currently similar, they also highlight again how low income families experience inflation in a different way,” said Jack Leslie, an economist at the Resolution Foundation think tank.

He said rising food prices and the prospect of a hike in Britain’s household energy price cap in April would hurt the lowest-income families most, given they spend twice as much on food and domestic bills as a proportion of their income.

“These families should be the priority for the government’s cost of living crisis response,” Leslie said.

Easing the impact of April’s higher energy bills for poorer households would cost at least 2.5 billion pounds ($3.4 billion), the think tank has calculated.

EXPENSIVE ESSENTIALS

A Reuters analysis of household spending data suggests that the inflation faced by low-income households is skewed towards essential spending on food and shelter, leaving them less able to adapt to increases in those prices.

In its latest report, the ONS said the slightly higher inflation rate for well-off households in December reflected their greater spending on transport.

The surging price of petrol and new and used cars – which comprise a far greater share of spending for high-income households – have been the biggest drivers of inflation over the last year.

Restaurant meals have been another big driver of inflation for high-income households.

While better-off households can spend less on eating out and delay replacing cars during a cost-of-living crisis, the inflation data last week showed a deteriorating picture for basic food and shelter costs.

Food prices rose by 1.4 per cent in December alone, the biggest rise for nine years. Prices of meat, vegetables and bread and cereals each jumped by more than 2 per cent in month-on-month terms.

Actual rents – where spending is skewed heavily towards the lowest income households – hit 2 per cent in annual terms in December, the biggest rise since 2016.

The ONS defined a high-income household as one with after-tax income that is in the top 20 per cent but not the top 10 per cent, and a low-income household as one with an income in the bottom 20 per cent but not the bottom 10 per cent, when adjusted for household size.

In recent weeks social campaigner and writer Jack Monroe has brought media attention to the way the ONS measures food prices.

She has argued that in attempting to capture a representative price for a given item – say a tin of baked beans – the ONS misses out big price moves in the cheapest tins which tend to be bought by the poorest households.

The ONS itself has acknowledged the limitations of its attempts to measure consumer prices, which is based on a basket of 700 types of goods and services from a wide range of suppliers, giving 180,000 pieces of price data each month.

It plans to use prices sent straight from supermarket checkouts – increasing the number of price data points to hundreds of millions – so it has inflation data on a wider range of goods within a particular category.

Friday’s figures also reflect spending patterns for 2019, before the pandemic – something the ONS plans to rectify in new data in May.

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