Inflation jumps to 1.5 percent in October

Tue Nov 17, 2009 11:53am GMT
 
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LONDON (Reuters) - The inflation rate accelerated in October after a sharp fall in transport costs last year was not repeated, official data showed on Tuesday.

The Office for National Statistics said consumer price inflation rose to 1.5 percent year-on-year last month, in line with the consensus forecast, from a five-year low of 1.1 percent in September.

The figures are unlikely to cause undue concern to Bank of England policymakers whose quarterly forecasts last week pencilled in a sharp pick-up in near-term inflation before it eases back below the central bank's 2 percent target to around 1.6 percent in the medium term.

"I don't think this is anything that will worry the Monetary Policy Committee too much," said Amit Kara, economist at UBS. "The MPC has highlighted that inflation is going to be very volatile in the near term."

Some economists reckon inflation could even hit 3 percent at the start of next year as a temporary cut in value-added tax is reversed.

The pound rose a quarter of a cent against the dollar and hit a two-month high against the euro after the figures, extending gains after Bank policymaker Andrew Sentance sounded an upbeat note on Britain's recovery prospects.

Bank Governor Mervyn King said last week that the central bank had an open mind on the need to pump more newly-printed money into the economy, days after it raised its asset-buying programme by another 25 billion pounds to 200 billion.

"While such a spike (in inflation) is expected to prove a temporary affair, it is hard to reconcile the Bank rolling out quantitative easing yet further in February hot on the heels of CPI potentially returning to letter writing territory," said Richard McGuire, fixed income strategist at RBC.

The central bank targets consumer price inflation at 2 percent and any deviation of more than a percentage point from this requires King to write an explanatory letter to the government.   Continued...

 
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