Britons 'skipping meals' as high inflation bites

About half of UK households are cutting back on number of meals and almost the same proportion is finding it harder to eat healthily amid cost-of-living crisis, consumer group Which? reports.

New data shows UK inflation jumped back above 10 percent in September on rampant food prices.
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New data shows UK inflation jumped back above 10 percent in September on rampant food prices.

Millions of Britons are skipping meals in the current cost-of-living crisis, a consumer group has warned, having already forecast that many risk fuel poverty after the UK curbed its energy price freeze.

Thursday's news came after data showed UK inflation jumped back above 10 percent in September on rampant food prices, as economic troubles pile up for beleaguered Conservative Prime Minister Liz Truss.

Half of UK households are cutting back on the number of meals, consumer group Which? said citing a survey of 3,000 people.

A similar proportion is finding it harder to eat healthily compared with before the crisis, while almost 80 percent are finding it difficult financially.

"The devastating impact of the cost-of-living crisis is, worryingly, leading to millions of people skipping meals or struggling to put healthy meals on the table," said Sue Davies, head of food policy at Which?.

Separately, the consumer group stated on Wednesday that the UK government's decision this week to curb its energy price freeze would leave millions unable to adequately heat their homes.

In a series of humiliating budget U-turns, new Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt announced on Monday that he would pull the plug on the flagship energy price freeze in April instead of late 2024.

"The government's decision to end universal energy support in April risks throwing millions of households across the country — not just the most financially vulnerable — into fuel poverty," warned Rocio Concha, head of policy and advocacy at Which?.

"The government must clarify how they will support those struggling to make ends meet beyond the spring and ensure that as energy prices remain incredibly high, consumers are not left out in the cold."

READ MORE: UK rate of inflation hits three-decade high

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Soaring inflation

The price freeze was aimed at protecting consumers from sky-high domestic fuel costs, which have rocketed on key energy producer Russia's attacks on Ukraine.

Britain has meanwhile been blighted by strikes this year, as workers protest over wages that have failed to keep pace with runaway inflation.

The retail prices index — an inflation measure that includes mortgage interest payments and is used by trade unions and employers when negotiating wage increases — leaped to 12.6 percent in September from 12.3 percent in August, data showed on Wednesday.

Frances O'Grady, general secretary of umbrella grouping the Trades Union Congress (TUC), demanded this week that Truss step down.

"I have a message for Liz Truss: Working people are proud of the jobs we do. We work hard. We work the longest hours in Europe," she told the TUC's annual gathering in the English seaside resort of Brighton.

"Yet thanks to your party's 12 years in government, millions are struggling to make ends meet."

READ MORE: UK's Truss vows she won't quit as MPs shout 'resign, resign'

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