Inflation turns positive in November

The Consumer Prices Index rose by 0.1% in the year to November 2015 - the first positive inflation data since July, according to the latest statistics from ONS.


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Tuesday 15th December 2015

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CPI had been -0.1% for the past two months.

Movements in transport costs and alcohol and tobacco prices were the main contributors to the rise in the rate, while falling clothing prices partially offset the rise.

CPIH (not a National Statistic) grew by 0.4% in the year to November 2015, up from 0.2% in October 2015.

Ben Brettell, Senior Economist, Hargreaves Lansdown, said:

“The plus sign on today’s inflation figure matters little. A glance at the chart shows inflation has been -0.1%, 0% or +0.1% since February – basically stuck at zero. Once again this places little pressure on the Bank of England to lift interest rates.

"Earlier this year the Bank forecast that inflation would pick up as the effect of the drop in oil prices fell out of the year-on-year calculations. This hasn’t transpired – oil and other commodity prices have fallen even further and continue to weigh on the inflation rate, while sterling’s strength has also exerted significant downward pressure.

"It now looks likely that inflation will remain low for some time yet, though it is expected to climb slowly in the coming months.

"Core inflation, which strips out volatile components like food and energy, also remains weak at 1.2%, though this was also up slightly from last month. This offers little suggestion that underlying inflationary pressures are building in the UK economy. Furthermore there are signs that wage growth is flattening out - figures due out tomorrow are expected to show pay growth has slowed from 3.0% to 2.5%.

"All this means the Bank of England is likely to wait longer before raising rates. Deputy governor Minouche Shafik said yesterday that she would need to see sustained wage growth sufficient to push inflation back up to target before voting for higher rates. I see base rate remaining at 0.5% into the second half of next year, and quite possibly even longer than that.”

Author:
Rozi Jones Editor Editor
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