Modern UK consumer price statistics are rooted in the
Retail Prices Index (RPI). The RPI was developed from an index designed as a compensation measure to protect workers from price increases associated with the
First World War. It provides published estimates of inflation from 1947 onwards, and the first official release of consumer price inflation based on the index was produced in January 1956. Inflation rose sharply in the 1970s, with the annual rate of increase in the RPI peaking at about 24% in 1975. High and volatile inflation contributed to the
1976 sterling crisis, and to the wider economic and industrial unrest that led to in the
Winter of Discontent. From the 1970s onwards a range of derivatives of the RPI were introduced to capture different concepts of inflation. These included measures that excluded mortgage interest payments or indirect taxes, such as
RPIX (RPI excluding mortgage interest payments), which were intended to provide a better measure of underlying inflation pressures than headline RPI.
RPIX An explicit inflation target was first announced in October 1992 by
Chancellor of the Exchequer Norman Lamont, following the United Kingdom’s departure from the
European Exchange Rate Mechanism. The target was expressed as a range for annual inflation in RPIX of 1% to 4%, with the intention that inflation should be kept in the lower half of that range over the life of the Parliament. In June 1995 this was replaced by a point target of 2.5% for RPIX inflation. In May 1997 the incoming
Labour government gave the
Bank of England operational independence and established the
Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). The MPC was made responsible for setting interest rates in order to meet the government’s 2.5% RPIX inflation target, while the Chancellor continued to define the target itself.
Introduction of CPI As part of a wider move to harmonise measures of consumer price inflation across the
European Union, the UK introduced the
Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) in the mid-1990s. The index was first published in 1997. In December 2003 the
National Statistician decided that the UK version of the HICP would be renamed the
Consumer Prices Index (CPI) in National Statistics publications. At the
Pre-Budget Report in December 2003, the
Chancellor of the Exchequer announced that the inflation target for monetary policy would switch from 2.5% annual inflation in RPIX to 2% annual inflation in CPI, with effect from 2004. Since then, the
Monetary Policy Committee has set interest rates with the aim of keeping CPI inflation at 2% in the medium term, and must explain deviations of more than one percentage point from the target in an open letter to the
Chancellor of the Exchequer.
CPIH In March 2013 the Office for National Statistics introduced the Consumer Prices Index including owner occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH), constructed on the same basis as CPI, but including a measure of owner occupiers’ housing costs and
Council Tax. CPIH was initially designated a
National Statistic, but this status was suspended in 2014 because of concerns about the methods and processing of the private rents data used to estimate owner occupiers’ housing costs. Following methodological improvements and a reassessment by the
UK Statistics Authority, the National Statistics status of CPIH was reinstated on 31 July 2017. On 21 March 2017, the ONS had already restructured its consumer price inflation publications so that CPIH became its lead measure of UK consumer price inflation, while CPI continued to be used for the government’s inflation target and for international comparisons. In parallel, the publication of RPI-related statistics was scaled back and the RPI was explicitly treated as a legacy index that should not be used for new purposes, reflecting official concerns about its methodology and upward bias. ==Implementation==