Beyond the cost of living crisis

Published: July 4, 2022, 8 p.m.

The Bank of England says inflation might reach 11 per cent this year. There are warnings that some people will have to choose between heating and eating.

But what does it mean for the whole economy when prices just keep rising? In the 1970s inflation in the UK led to prices and wages spiralling as workers fought for wages that would keep up with prices.

Those years were dominated by waves of strikes and social unrest as inflation became embedded in the economic system. The current situation is being exacerbated by Covid 19, the war in Ukraine and Brexit so is there anything that government can do to stop it? How bad could it get? And are the days of low inflation gone forever?

Reporter Philip Coggan talks to:\nManoj Pradhan consultant at Talking Macroeconomics\nAndy Haldane, Chief Executive of the RSA and former Chief Economist at the Bank of England\nJagjit Chadha: Director of the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR)\nHelen Dickinson, Chief Executive of the British Retail Consortium\nRuth Gregory, Economist at Capital Economics\nKenneth Rogoff, Professor of Economics at Harvard University

Producer: Claire Bowes \nEditor: Richard Fenton-Smith \nProduction co-ordinators: Helena Warwick-Cross and Maria Ogundele \nSound engineer: Neil Churchill