Record 13.3% UK food inflation raises fears of
‘another difficult year’
British Retail Consortium figures come amid concern
over economy and rising cost of energy bills
Richard
Partington Economics correspondent
@RJPartington
Wed 4 Jan
2023 00.01 GMT
UK food
price rises soared to a record rate in December, figures show, as retail
industry bosses warned that high inflation would continue in 2023 amid the
fallout from surging energy bills.
Annual food
inflation jumped to 13.3% in December, up from 12.4% in November, according to
the latest monthly report from trade body the British Retail Consortium (BRC)
and the data firm Nielsen. The BRC said this was the highest monthly rate since
it began collecting data in 2005.
Highlighting
the pressure on households during the festive shopping season, the industry
snapshot showed the price of many essential foods rose sharply as the
reverberations from Russia’s war in Ukraine continued to drive up energy costs.
The BRC
said high prices for animal feed, fertiliser and energy fed into higher food
prices on supermarket shelves, while warning that consumers would probably face
further increases in 2023.
“It was a
challenging Christmas for many households across the UK,” said the BRC’s chief
executive, Helen Dickinson. “2023 will be another difficult year for consumers
and businesses as inflation shows no immediate signs of waning.”
The figures
came as concerns grew about the strength of the British economy, with the
headline inflation rate at its highest level since the early 1980s, driven by
soaring gas and electricity bills. Manufacturers suffered a further downturn in
activity in December, with production, new orders and employment all in
decline.
The S&P
Global/Cips UK manufacturing purchasing managers’ Index fell to a 31-month low
of 45.3 in December, down from 46.5 in November, indicating a fifth successive
month of contraction in UK factory output.
Domestic
and overseas demand remained lacklustre as the industry suffered a weak end to
2022, with companies facing rising costs, increasing market volatility and
problems related to Brexit for firms with EU-based customers.
John Glen,
the chief economist at the Chartered Institute of Procurement and Supply, said:
“New orders dropped at one of the fastest rates in over a decade as overseas
customers were put off by Brexit customs requirements pushing up costs and
delays and domestic orders were affected by the general pressure from rising
prices.”
As the
soaring costs fed through to consumers, households sharply cut back on spending
in recent months. Figures from Barclaycard show retail sales fell overall in
2022, while high street footfall slumped last week at a time when consumers
would usually be hitting the shops for the Boxing Day sales.
According
to the BRC figures for December, when households usually stock up on Christmas
food and drink, the inflation rate for fresh produce accelerated to a new
record of 15% in December, up from 14.3% a month earlier.
However,
retailers offering steep discounts on non-food products helped to bring
December’s overall shop price inflation figure down a little, to 7.3% from 7.4%
the month before, as high street stores and online retailers looked to shed
excess stock built up during periods of disruption to supply chains earlier in
2022.
Aldi said
it had experienced record Christmas sales as more shoppers turned to the
discount chain amid the cost of living crisis. The retailer said sales jumped
by 26% in December to top £1.4bn in the UK and Ireland for the first time.
The
discounter highlighted strong sales of fresh meat products, with poultry and
pork up 28% for the month. Chilled dessert sales rose by 30%, while sales of
cheese increased by about 50%. Snacks such as crisps and nuts were up more than
40% as the World Cup coincided with the Christmas period for the first time.
Dickinson
said businesses struggling with soaring energy costs urgently required support
from the government. The chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, confirmed in the run-up to
Christmas that he was preparing an extension in financial support for
businesses with high energy bills, which would be announced “early in the new
year”.
“Without
the scheme, retailers could see their energy bills rise by £7.5bn,” Dickinson
said. “The government must urgently provide clarity on what future support
might look like, or else consumers might pay the price.”

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