Food prices rise at fastest rate for 11 years

The price of groceries is increasing at its fastest rate in 11 years, adding an extra £271 to the amount average households will pay at the till this year.

Data from Kantar showed that grocery price inflation hit 5.9% in April, as the number of items on promotion decreased. It is the fastest rise since December 2011.

Everyday essentials

Fraser McKevitt, head of retail and consumer insight at Kantar said:

The average household will now be exposed to a potential price increase of £271 per year.

A lot of this is going on non-discretionary, everyday essentials, which will prove difficult to cut back on as budgets are squeezed.

McKevitt continued:

We’re seeing a clear flight to value as shoppers watch their pennies. The level of products bought on promotion, currently at 27.3%, has decreased 2.7 percentage points as everyday low price strategies come to the fore.

Imperfect tracking

Campaigner Jack Monroe recently criticised supermarkets for taking their cheapest everyday items off shelves.

They argued that inflation – which tracks the cost of the same items over time – is an imperfect way of measuring how much prices are increasing because the cheapest products are no longer available.

Monroe also warned against governmental reliance on food banks:

McKevitt said supermarkets have been listening, with Asda, Morrisons and Tesco all taking steps to offer cheaper food to customers.

Kantar found that supermarket sales dropped 5.9% over the 12 weeks to April 17.

Sales are also, for the first time since the pandemic started, 0.6% below where they were two years ago. This period now takes into account the early days of the first lockdown.

Aldi is the fastest growing retailer, with its sales increasing 4.2%, while Lidl saw a 4% rise.

McKevitt said:

Over one million extra shoppers visited Aldi and Lidl respectively over the past 12 weeks compared with this time last year.

Both retailers achieved record-breaking market shares, with Aldi now holding 8.8% while Lidl stands at 6.6%. Collectively, the two discounters account for 15.4% of the market – up from just 5.5% a decade ago.

Tesco was the only other retailer whose market share grew over the period – by 0.3 percentage points to 27.3%.

The Joseph Rowntree Foundation urged quick action from the government:

The Trussell Trust asked for people affected by the cost of living crisis to get in touch:

By The Canary

This post was originally published on The Canary.