Inflation 'hitting pensioners hard
Food prices are going UP. The price of a simple tin of peas
has doubled in last few months. Fruit is becoming a luxury.
Pensioners suffer more from soaring inflation than their working
counterparts, research said.
A study by the Institute for Fiscal Studies found the average
pensioner experienced a 7.4% rise in the cost of living during
2008, while non-pensioner's outgoings increased by 5.4%
Older, poorer pensioners were found to be even more affected by
the rising costs of goods, food and fuel.
Pensioners over the age of 80, and who live in the poorest third
of the UK's households, experienced a 9% rise in their living
costs - nearly double that of the average British consumer -
while men living alone saw their expenditure leap by 8.0%.
The research was based on the Retail Price Index (RPI), which
measures the cost of an average basket of goods and services,
and data from the Expenditure and Food survey from the past 30
years.
Researchers calculated the inflation levels for different
households, and compared it to the national average.
The disparity was down to food and fuel making up a larger
proportion of the average pensioner's shopping basket, they
said.
In the year to August world agricultural prices rose 40%, oil
prices went up by 60% and wholesale gas prices by 90%. The rise
has driven inflation in the UK to over 4%.
"The oldest and poorest pensioners in particular currently find
themselves hardest hit by inflation, as food and fuel make up a
much bigger part of their spending than for non-pensioners,"
said report author Andrew Leicester.
"For these households, increases in the state pension and even
of pension credit may not fully compensate them on average for
inflation at present."
See Press Release from Institute for Fiscal Studies
http://www.ifs.org.uk/pr/pensioners_inflation.pdf