Wednesday, 20 May 2026

The inflation illusion

  The 2.8% Inflation Myth: Why the ONS Numbers Don’t Match Your Wallet

The latest headlines are full of quiet celebration. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has announced that the UK’s twelve-month Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rate has dropped to 2.8%. On paper, it looks like the cost-of-living crisis is finally packing its bags.
But if you’ve been to a petrol station this week, paid a contractor, or simply watched your supermarket total climb, you probably feel like you’re being gaslit.
Your instincts are right!
There is a massive, structural gulf between the "official" numbers used by policymakers and the real-world inflation hitting working-class wallets. The headline 2.8% figure is an average that masks a huge tug-of-war happening in the economy right now.
Here is exactly why the official inflation rate is fundamentally flawed, how the ONS flawed figures hides the pain, and what your real inflation rate actually looks like.
1. The "Base Effect" Illusion (Slower Doesn't Mean Cheaper)
The first flaw is a psychological one that the government and media rarely clarify. When the ONS says inflation has dropped to 2.8%, a lot of people naturally hear "things are getting 2.8% cheaper."
That’s not true. Inflation is a measure of speed, not price levels. A drop to 2.8% just means prices are rising slower than they were this time last year. But remember: this follows years of compounding, double-digit price spikes. According to data tracked by the Living Wage Foundation, overall consumer prices at the start of this year were 28.3% higher than they were in December 2020.
A lower inflation percentage doesn't undo the damage; it just freezes the pain at its highest peak.
2. The Energy Cap Distorts the Entire Basket
The biggest reason the headline rate looks so low right now is a temporary mathematical average quirk: domestic energy bills.
In April, Ofgem lowered the household gas and electricity price cap. Because home energy is a massive component of the ONS inflation calculation, this single drop dragged the entire national average down.
The problem? This is a temporary reprieve that completely masks soaring costs everywhere else. While your gas bill might look slightly better this month, look at what else is happening:
• The Fuel Pump Spike: Driven by Trump’s war in the Middle East, motor fuel prices have been surging. Petrol and diesel have seen massive upward pressure, hitting drivers directly every single week.
• Factory Gate Costs: The raw material costs hitting UK factory gates have been climbing sharply. Manufacturers cannot absorb these pipeline pressures forever; those costs are actively being passed down to the shelves right now.
When the ONS aggregates a temporary dip in utility bills against a massive spike in transport and manufacturing, it spits out a neat 2.8% average. But you can't pay your grocery bill with an utility average.
3. The Flaw of the "Average" Basket (Inflation Inequality)
The fundamental mathematical flaw of the CPI (consumer price index) is that it is based on an "average household" basket of goods. The ONS looks at total spending across the whole UK and assigns weights to different categories.
There’s also a bit of a psyops trick in calling it the ‘consumer’ price index.
But a millionaire and a worker on the shop floor do not buy the same things. Academic research into "inflation inequality" reveals that the ONS basket heavily over emphasises discretionary luxuries—like package holidays, meals out, and high-end tech—which wealthier households spend money on.
For the average working person, a much higher percentage of weekly income goes entirely toward survival costs: rent, energy, basic groceries, and commuting. When food and fuel spike, poorer households face a drastically higher real-world inflation rate than the headline index suggests. If you spend 40% of your income on food and fuel, your personal inflation rate is vastly higher than someone who spends only 10% on those items.
What is "Real" Inflation Right Now?
If we strip away the artificial smoothing of the ONS figures, what are we actually dealing with?
If you want a truer picture of the economy, you have to look at the underlying cost pressures. Independent analysts and economic forecasters are already warning that April's low number is a temporary blip. With global supply chain disruptions, rising import costs, and oil price pressures mounting, many economists expect headline (the flawed ONS) inflation to bounce right back above 4% later this year.
If you calculate inflation purely based on an Essential Goods Index (removing luxury electronics, holiday bookings, and corporate hospitality), real everyday inflation for the average working person is comfortably sitting at 6%.
As most people can’t spend much more than ‘essential goods’ because wages are so low, the real rate of inflation for working class people like me, (I don’t know about you) is about 6% or more.
The Bottom Line
The next time you hear a politician point to a 2.8% inflation rate as proof they are working for the economy, don’t believe it and don't doubt your what your own wallet is telling you.
The CPI is a bureaucratic metric designed for macroeconomic targeting and pension indexing; it was never designed to accurately reflect the lived experience of a working household. The underlying pressure on our wages is intensifying, and the prices of the things we actually need to live and get to work are still on a steep upward march.
The flawed headline numbers are coming down, but the real-world costs are absolutely going up.
Are you seeing a difference between the news reports and your real life costs?

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The inflation illusion

    The 2.8% Inflation Myth: Why the ONS Numbers Don’t Match Your Wallet The latest headlines are full of quiet celebration. The Office for ...