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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Cost of living rises at fastest rate for 40 years

Inflation rose to 9% in the year to April, up from an already high 7% in March

A woman shopping(Image: Hinckley Times)

The cost of living in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ has increased at its fastest rate for 40 years as soaring energy bills put millions of households under pressure.

Inflation rose to 9% in the year to April, up from an already high 7% in March, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). It was the fastest measured rate since records began in 1989, and the ONS estimates it was the highest since 1982.

A large portion of the rise was due to the price cap on energy bills, which was hiked by 54% for the average household at the start of the month.

Grant Fitzner, chief economist at the ONS, said: “Inflation rose steeply in April, driven by the sharp climb in electricity and gas prices as the higher price cap came into effect. Around three-quarters of the increase in the annual rate this month came from utility bills."

The figures will add to pressure faced by households to cut back on bills and everyday spending. Already ahead of the figures being released, surveys showed that people were switching to cheaper alternatives, and trying to control how much energy they use to run their homes.

Much of the jump is down to the high cost of energy on international markets, especially gas, although oil prices have also shot up.

This has also pushed up the price of many other items, including food, which are made or transported using gas and oil-based products. The war in Ukraine has also hit global food supplies.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said inflation was hitting countries around the world, and pointed to energy prices as a main culprit.