The annual rate of UK inflation fell in August as the cost of petrol, food and non-alcoholic drinks declined.

Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation fell to 1.5% from 1.6% in August, the Office for National Statistics said.

It means the Bank of England remains under little pressure to raise interest rates in order to keep CPI inflation at or below its target rate of 2%.

Retail Price Index (RPI) inflation also saw a reduction, to 2.4%, from 2.5% the previous month.

Prices of food and non-alcoholic drinks fell by 1.1%, marking their steepest fall for more than a decade.

An ONS spokesman said competition between rival supermarket chains was a factor. Food prices had also been pushed up by cold weather a year earlier.

Bucking the downward trend, clothing, transport services and alcohol all rose in price faster than the headline inflation rate.

And core inflation, which strips out food, alcohol, tobacco and energy, notched up a 1.9% rate rise.

 

Source-BBC