UK public's inflation expectations hit record high - Citi/YouGov

Reuters

Published Jan 26, 2022 07:51AM ET

Updated Jan 26, 2022 08:22AM ET

LONDON (Reuters) -The British public's expectations for inflation in 12 months' time jumped to a record high in January, according to a monthly survey that will bolster the Bank of England's concerns that the current spike in price growth will prove persistent.

Year-ahead inflation expectations in the monthly Citi/YouGov survey, published on Wednesday, surged to 4.8% in January from 4.0% in December, the highest since this series began in 2006 and almost double their long-run average.

The official rate of consumer price inflation hit 5.4% in December, its highest since March 1992, and the BoE is widely expected to raise rates on Feb. 3, which would be its second rate rise in less than two months.

Longer-term public inflation expectations for the next five to 10 years - which some economists think give a better guide on whether price pressures are becoming entrenched - held at 3.8%, their joint-highest level since 2013.

"Today's data, especially the level of long-term expectations, suggest elevated risk inflation expectations could become de-anchored to the upside as inflation accelerates in the months ahead," Citi economist Benjamin Nabarro said.

"However, for now, we think expectations remain anchored overall."