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UK shop price inflation picks up, retailers ask government to help

By Thomson Reuters May 26, 2026 | 1:48 AM

LONDON, May 26 (Reuters) – British shop price inflation sped up in May on the back of disruption and higher ​energy costs caused by the Iran ‌war, according to a retail industry group which said the government had to do more to keep costs down.

The British Retail Consortium’s monthly survey ‌of ​major chains published on ⁠Tuesday showed that ⁠prices in May were 1.2% higher than a year earlier, up from a 1.0% rise in April.

Food price inflation slowed to ​2.7%, its lowest in a year, from 3.1%.

Furniture and health and beauty ⁠products rose by the ⁠most reflecting rising raw material and ​shipping costs.

BRC Chief Executive Helen Dickinson said ​the government – which has pressed supermarkets to ‌slow price increases and flirted with the idea of demanding price caps this month – had to play its part in bringing ⁠down costs for retailers.

“Reducing the non-commodity charges, taxes and levies that make up more than two-thirds ⁠of energy ‌bills, and cutting red tape ⁠would help keep inflation down,” ​Dickinson ‌said.

Britain’s broader official consumer price ​inflation index ⁠fell to 2.8% in April but is expected to rise again to around 4% in the coming months due to the energy price shock.

(Writing by William Schomberg; editing by ​Suban Abdulla)