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Food inflation has hit its highest level in almost a year and could continue to go up, according to an industry body.
The British Retail Consortium (BRC) reported a 2.6% annual lift in food costs during April - the highest level since May last year and up from a 2.4% rate the previous month. The body said there was a clear risk of further increases ahead due to rising costs, with the sector facing £7bn of tax increases this year due to the budget last October.
Money latest: Can we hide my wife's redundancy from mortgage provider? It warned that shoppers risked paying a higher price - but separate industry figures suggested any immediate blows were being cushioned by the effects of a continuing supermarket price war. Kantar Worldpanel, which tracks trends and prices, said spending on promotions reached its highest level this year at almost 30% of total sales over the four weeks to 20 April.
It said that price cuts, mainly through loyalty cards, helped people to make the most of the Easter holiday with almost 20% of items sold at respective market leaders Tesco and Sainsbury's on a price match. Its measure of wider grocery inflation rose to 3.8%, however.
Wider BRC data showed overall shop price inflation at -0.1% over the 12 months to April, with discounting largely responsible for weaker non-food goods. But its chief executive, Helen Dickinson, said retailers were "unable to absorb" the surge in costs they were facing.
"The days of shop price deflation look numbered," she said, as food inflation rose to its highest in 11 months, and non-food deflation eased significantly. "Everyday essentials including bread, meat, and fish, all increased prices on the month.
This comes in the same month retailers face a mountain of new employment costs in the form of higher employer National Insurance Contributions and increased NLW [national living wage]," she added. While retail sales growth has proved somewhat resilient this year, it is believed big rises to household bills in April - from things like inflation-busting water, energy and council tax bills - will bite and continue to keep a lid on major purchases.
Also pressing on both consumer and business sentiment is Donald Trump's trade war - threatening further costs and hits to economic growth ahead. Read more from Sky News:UK-US trade talks 'moving in positive way', says White HouseM&S tells agency workers to stay at home after cyberattack A further BRC survey, also published on Tuesday, showed more than half of human resources directors expect to reduce hiring due to the government's planned Employment Rights Bill.
The bill, which proposes protections for millions of workers including guaranteed minimum hours, greater hurdles for sacking new staff and increased sick pay, is currently being debated in parliament. The BRC said one of the biggest concerns was that guaranteed minimum hours rules would hit part-time roles..