<p>UK inflation slowed last month but held above 10 per cent on soaring food prices, official data showed Wednesday, further fuelling a cost-of-living crisis despite a series of aggressive interest-rate hikes.</p>.<p>The Consumer Prices Index rose by a stronger-than-expected 10.1 per cent in March from 10.4 per cent in February, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement.</p>.<p>Inflation held in double figures on surging food and housing costs, dashing expectations for a drop below 10 per cent after the Bank of England sharply raised borrowing costs.</p>.<p>The rate had zoomed to a 41-year peak at 11.1 per cent last October on sky-high energy bills after key gas producer Russia invaded Ukraine.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/inflation-data-earnings-global-trends-to-guide-market-movement-this-week-1210161.html" target="_blank">Inflation data, earnings, global trends to guide market movement this week</a></strong></p>.<p>The UK's Conservative government, headed by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, had last month unveiled a budget aimed at tackling the cost-of-living crisis, which has sparked strikes as wages drop in value.</p>.<p>"These figures reaffirm exactly why we must continue with our efforts to drive down inflation so we can ease pressure on families and businesses," said finance minister Jeremy Hunt.</p>.<p>"We are on track to do this... and we'll continue supporting people with cost-of-living support."</p>.<p>Despite the efforts, official data this week showed that pay continues to grow more slowly than prices.</p>.<p>"Inflation eased slightly in March, but remains at a high level," said ONS chief economist Grant Fitzner.</p>.<p>The main downward impact was from falling motor fuel and heating oil costs, while clothing, furniture and household goods rose by less than one year ago.</p>.<p>Fitzner cautioned that this was "partially offset by the cost of food, which is still climbing steeply".</p>.<p>Food price inflation rocketed in March to 19.1 per cent, hitting the highest level since August 1977.</p>.<p>The food rate has hit a series of 45-year peaks for several months.</p>.<p>There were record March gains for bread and cereal, chocolate and confectionery, other food products including ready-meals and sauces, and hot beverages, the ONS said.</p>.<p>"The cost of simply living has crept insidiously higher and wage increases are struggling to keep pace with such high inflation," noted AJ Bell analyst Danni Hewson.</p>.<p>"UK consumers will be utterly fed up with the situation and they'll be angry that other parts of the world seem to be benefiting from inflation falling much faster."</p>.<p>Hunt in March extended a subsidy on energy bills for a further three months, after the Ukraine conflict sent them surging -- and fuelled runaway global inflation.</p>.<p>The government forecasts inflation will sink to 2.9 per cent by the end of this year.</p>.<p>The Bank of England has ramped up interest rates 11 times in a row since late 2021 in a bid to tame consumer prices.</p>.<p>The BoE's key rate currently stands at 4.25 per cent, the highest level since late 2008.</p>.<p>Yet inflation remains at more than five times its official target of two per cent.</p>.<p>The central bank's next decision is due in May.</p>.<p>"The (inflation) drop is too modest for the (BoE) to stop raising rates; we now look for a final 25 basis-point hike," commented Pantheon Macroeconomics analyst Samuel Tombs.</p>.<p>BoE governor Andrew Bailey recently warned that policymakers needed to see inflation come down sharply before ending its current monetary-tightening cycle.</p>
<p>UK inflation slowed last month but held above 10 per cent on soaring food prices, official data showed Wednesday, further fuelling a cost-of-living crisis despite a series of aggressive interest-rate hikes.</p>.<p>The Consumer Prices Index rose by a stronger-than-expected 10.1 per cent in March from 10.4 per cent in February, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said in a statement.</p>.<p>Inflation held in double figures on surging food and housing costs, dashing expectations for a drop below 10 per cent after the Bank of England sharply raised borrowing costs.</p>.<p>The rate had zoomed to a 41-year peak at 11.1 per cent last October on sky-high energy bills after key gas producer Russia invaded Ukraine.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/inflation-data-earnings-global-trends-to-guide-market-movement-this-week-1210161.html" target="_blank">Inflation data, earnings, global trends to guide market movement this week</a></strong></p>.<p>The UK's Conservative government, headed by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, had last month unveiled a budget aimed at tackling the cost-of-living crisis, which has sparked strikes as wages drop in value.</p>.<p>"These figures reaffirm exactly why we must continue with our efforts to drive down inflation so we can ease pressure on families and businesses," said finance minister Jeremy Hunt.</p>.<p>"We are on track to do this... and we'll continue supporting people with cost-of-living support."</p>.<p>Despite the efforts, official data this week showed that pay continues to grow more slowly than prices.</p>.<p>"Inflation eased slightly in March, but remains at a high level," said ONS chief economist Grant Fitzner.</p>.<p>The main downward impact was from falling motor fuel and heating oil costs, while clothing, furniture and household goods rose by less than one year ago.</p>.<p>Fitzner cautioned that this was "partially offset by the cost of food, which is still climbing steeply".</p>.<p>Food price inflation rocketed in March to 19.1 per cent, hitting the highest level since August 1977.</p>.<p>The food rate has hit a series of 45-year peaks for several months.</p>.<p>There were record March gains for bread and cereal, chocolate and confectionery, other food products including ready-meals and sauces, and hot beverages, the ONS said.</p>.<p>"The cost of simply living has crept insidiously higher and wage increases are struggling to keep pace with such high inflation," noted AJ Bell analyst Danni Hewson.</p>.<p>"UK consumers will be utterly fed up with the situation and they'll be angry that other parts of the world seem to be benefiting from inflation falling much faster."</p>.<p>Hunt in March extended a subsidy on energy bills for a further three months, after the Ukraine conflict sent them surging -- and fuelled runaway global inflation.</p>.<p>The government forecasts inflation will sink to 2.9 per cent by the end of this year.</p>.<p>The Bank of England has ramped up interest rates 11 times in a row since late 2021 in a bid to tame consumer prices.</p>.<p>The BoE's key rate currently stands at 4.25 per cent, the highest level since late 2008.</p>.<p>Yet inflation remains at more than five times its official target of two per cent.</p>.<p>The central bank's next decision is due in May.</p>.<p>"The (inflation) drop is too modest for the (BoE) to stop raising rates; we now look for a final 25 basis-point hike," commented Pantheon Macroeconomics analyst Samuel Tombs.</p>.<p>BoE governor Andrew Bailey recently warned that policymakers needed to see inflation come down sharply before ending its current monetary-tightening cycle.</p>