Shop price inflation jumps for first time in 17 months - here is what is means for interest rates

Shop prices are now 0.6% cheaper than a year ago, but have risen from October’s 0.8%

food shopping basket
(Image credit: © Getty Images)

A 17-month-long run of falling shop inflation has come to an end, which has further dampened hopes of another interest rate cut from the Bank of England before the end of the year.

Shop prices are now 0.6% cheaper than a year ago but have risen from October’s 0.8% – the first time in 17 months that inflation has been higher than the previous month, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC).

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Chris Newlands

Chris is a freelance journalist, and was previously an editor and correspondent at the Financial Times as well as the business and money editor at The i Newspaper. He is also the author of the Virgin Money Maker, the personal finance guide published by Virgin Books, and has written for the BBC, The Wall Street Journal, The Independent, South China Morning Post, TimeOut, Barron's and The Guardian. He is a graduate in Economics.