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UK shop prices declined at a slower pace in September, data published by the British Retail Consortium, or BRC, showed on Wednesday. The shop price index dropped 0.5 percent on a yearly basis in September after easing 0.8 percent in August.
"There are now clear signs the months-long cost pressures from rising transport costs, labour shortages, Brexit red-tape, and commodity costs are starting to filter through to consumer prices," Helen Dickinson, chief executive at BRC, said.
Food prices edged up 0.1 percent and non-food prices were down 1 percent annually.
Food prices rose for the first time in six months and some non-food products, such as DIY & gardening, are seeing the highest rate of inflation since summer 2018, Dickinson noted.
Whilst non food retailers have so far able to mitigate a lot of the impact, the outlook is for shop price inflation to return over the next few months, Mike Watkins, head of Retailer and Business Insight, NielsenIQ, said.