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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Richard Partington and Ellen Wishart

From milk to shoes, these are the everyday items hit by soaring UK prices

Illustration featuring a hen, petrol plump, light switch, bottle of milk, slice of bread and tomatoes
The cost of everyday items in the UK, from food to petrol, continues to rise. Composite: Guardian

Living standards in Britain are expected to fall at the fastest annual rate since the 1950s, as the war in Ukraine adds to soaring inflation caused by Covid, driving up energy prices and the cost of a weekly shop.

Official figures show inflation rose to 6.2% in February, and is forecast to peak close to 9% this year. The Office for National Statistics has this week released charts for February amid year-on-year increases for many items.

Here are some of the items that have gone up in price:

A petrol pump, tea bag and light switch

Gas, electricity and other fuels: 23.1%
Petrol: 23%
Tea bags, per 250g: 5.9%

A spoonful of sugar, block of butter and a slice of bread

Sugar, granulated, per kg: 8.5%
Butter, block, per 250g: 5.8%
Bread,
white loaf, sliced, 800g: 5.6%

A sofa and a jumper

Household furniture: 14.7%
Garments for women: 12.1%

A hen and a cow

Chicken: roasting, oven ready, per kg, fresh or chilled: 9.3%
Beef: per kg,
best beef mince: 14%

Tomatoes and milk

Tomatoes, per kg: 13.6%
Milk,
pasteurised, per pint: 16.7%

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