The
rate of UK inflation rose sharply in June, pushed up by higher clothing,
footwear, food and non-alcoholic drinks prices, official figures show.
The
Consumer Prices Index rose to 1.9%, up from 1.5% in May, according to the
Office for National Statistics.
Women's
clothing prices contributed heavily to the rise.
Air
fares and furniture prices also pushed the inflation rate up, the ONS said.
The
rate is now close to the Bank of England's 2% target. It has remained below the
target for seven consecutive months.
The
pound jumped against the dollar following the inflation figures, climbing as
high as
$1.7144, around three quarters of a cent higher on the day.
Inflation
as measured by the Retail Prices Index (RPI), which includes housing costs,
rose to 2.6%, up from 2.4% in May.
Separately,
figures from the ONS showed that annual house price inflation hit 10.5% in May.
Rate hike
Food
and non-alcoholic drinks prices rose overall, with vegetables, bread and
chocolate among the foodstuffs going up in price.
Economists
said that the price rises may strengthen the case for a rise in UK interest
rates, which have been held at a record low of 0.5%, especially against a
backdrop of rising house prices and falling unemployment.
"The
news will further fuel expectations that the Bank of England will start raising
interest rates sooner rather than later, with November looking the most likely
month for the first hike," said Chris Williamson. chief economist at
research firm Markit.
He
added that fine June weather may have led retailers to hold back on summer
clothing discounts.
Jeremy
Cook, chief economist at currency company World First, said the rise in prices
was "a big surprise".
"Inflation
is now rising at its fastest rate since January, with clothing, food and
transport contributing well," he said.
However,
for people who have been living with below inflation wage increases, "the
situation just got a little more painful," he said.
Wage
rises began to match inflation in April, after six years of falling real wages.
But
the latest figures show wages rising at less than 1%, well below the 1.9% rise
in prices recorded in June, meaning household incomes are being squeezed again.
New
figures for wage rises in the three months to May are released by the ONS on
Wednesday.
BBC
Business
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