British factory costs fell in June at their sharpest annual rate since 1997 and output prices slid at their fastest in 7-1/2 years, in a sign inflation will fall sharply in the coming months.
The Office for National Statistics said output prices fell 1.2 per cent year-on-year, the sharpest drop since December 2001 and more than the 0.8 per cent fall expected by analysts.
Input prices fell 11 per cent on the year, less than forecasts for a 12.2 per cent decline but still the weakest annual rate since April 1997.
Inflation went up sharply last year because of record high energy prices but policymakers are expecting it to come down just as swiftly in the coming months as Britain battles its deepest downturn in decades.
But the latest data show that crude oil prices could once again start putting upward pressure on inflation ahead.
Crude oil prices jumped 14.3 per cent in June alone, the biggest monthly rise since January 2005.
Reuters