{"id":908,"date":"2024-04-21T09:06:14","date_gmt":"2024-04-20T23:06:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/?p=908"},"modified":"2026-04-14T11:19:23","modified_gmt":"2026-04-14T01:19:23","slug":"why-does-everything-cost-so-much-more-and-what-is-really-behind-rising-prices-in-the-uk","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chipkie.com\/uk\/2024\/04\/21\/why-does-everything-cost-so-much-more-and-what-is-really-behind-rising-prices-in-the-uk\/","title":{"rendered":"Why Does Everything Cost So Much More and What Is Really Behind Rising Prices in the UK"},"content":{"rendered":"

If you’ve noticed your weekly shop creeping past \u00a3100, your energy bill doubling, or your morning coffee costing what a full lunch did a decade ago, you’re not imagining things. The UK has experienced its sharpest sustained price increases in over 40 years, and while headline inflation has eased from its 2022\u20132023 peak, prices themselves have not come back down. That distinction matters enormously for your finances, and misunderstanding it is costing people real money.<\/p>\n

Inflation Fell \u2014 Prices Didn’t<\/h3>\n

This is the single most misunderstood point in personal finance right now. When the Office for National Statistics reports that CPI inflation has dropped from 11.1% to around 2\u20133%, it does not<\/strong> mean things are getting cheaper. It means prices are still rising, just more slowly. The cumulative effect of several years of high inflation means that a basket of goods costing \u00a3100 in early 2020 now costs roughly \u00a3125\u2013\u00a3130. That increase is baked in permanently unless we experience sustained deflation \u2014 which brings its own severe problems and is not something the Bank of England targets.<\/p>\n

So when people ask “why does everything cost so much more?”, the honest answer is: because the price level has reset upward, and wages for most workers have not kept pace. Real household disposable income \u2014 what you can actually buy with your pay after tax and inflation \u2014 fell for consecutive years. Even as nominal wage growth has picked up, for many households the damage is already done. Savings have been depleted, debt has increased, and the cost of essentials now claims a larger share of every pound earned.<\/p>\n

What Actually Drove Prices Up<\/h3>\n

There was no single villain. The price surge was a collision of multiple forces hitting simultaneously:<\/p>\n