
Bloomberg
Inflation might be the Grinch that steals Christmas in Britain this year.
UK household expenditure is set to fall 0.1 percent from a year earlier during the holidays, according to a report by Visa and IHS Markit published on Monday.
The slump will likely emerge as a result of faster price growth and the resulting pinch on incomes. The pound’s fall since the Brexit referendum last year has pushed inflation to 3 percent, outstripping basic wage growth. Add in the first Bank of England interest-rate increase in a decade and shoppers have little choice but to tighten their belts, the report said.
A separate report by the Centre for Economic Performance showed that higher inflation since the EU vote is costing the average UK household over 400 pounds ($527) per year.
“Looking back, consumers were in a sweet spot in 2016—low inflation and rising wages meant there was a little extra in household budgets to spend on the festive period,†said Mark Antipof, chief commercial officer at Visa. “2017 has seen a reversal of fortunes—with inflation outpacing wage growth and the recent interest rate rise leaving shoppers with less money in their pockets.â€
The CEP report said that the costs of higher inflation have been felt
the most in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, while London has been impacted the least.