INFLATION reached a two-and-a-half-year high in January as food and fuel prices pushed up the cost of living. The Liberal Democrats said it was more evidence of the “Brexit squeeze”.

The Office for National Statistics[ONS] said the Consumer Price Index[CPI] measure of inflation hit 1.8 per cent last month, up from 1.6 per cent in December, marking its highest level since June 2014.

However, the move came in shy of the Bank of England's two per cent target and economists' expectations of 1.9 per cent.

Separate figures for the Producer Price Index showed that input prices - the amount paid for materials and fuel by UK manufacturers - saw its highest rate of growth since September 2008, rising 20.5 per cent in January.

Sterling's slump against the US dollar and the euro since the EU referendum result, coupled with rising oil prices, also caused import prices to leap 20.2 per cent over the period, the ONS said.

Ballooning import prices triggered by the Brexit-hit pound are expected to push up everyday prices as companies pass their soaring costs to consumers.

Mike Prestwood, the ONS’s head of inflation, said the rise in CPI was triggered by rising petrol and diesel prices and a "significant slowdown in the fall in food prices".

The pound was down 0.5 per cent against the US dollar at 1.246 and 0.6 per cent lower against the euro at 1.17 after inflation came in lower than forecast.

The Bank of England expects inflation to lift to its two per cent target in February, peaking at 2.8 per cent in the first half of next year, before falling back to 2.4 per cent in three years' time.

Last week, Kristin Forbes, one of the nine rate-setters on the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee, signalled that she was inching closer to voting for a rate rise after becoming increasingly "uncomfortable" with surging inflation given the economy's resilience to the Brexit vote.

The main driver behind the January's jump in CPI came from transport prices, which dropped by less than the amount a year ago, falling by 0.6 per cent between December and January, compared with a 2.5 per cent drop the year before.

Fuel prices climbed 3.4 per cent over the period after dropping by 2.6 per cent a year earlier, as the resurgent cost of Brent crude fed its way through to prices at the pumps.

The price of petrol rose to 118.6p per litre in January, up from 114.6p per litre the month before, while diesel reached 121.9p per litre last month, up from 118p per litre in December.

Overall food prices were flat between December and January after falling 0.6 per cent a year ago as the sharp drop in grocery costs, triggered in part by the supermarket price war, ground to a halt.

The ONS said a rise in the cost of imported foods caused by the Brexit-hit pound could have been a factor that caused the fall in food prices to slow.

Downward pressure on CPI came from a drop in the price of clothing and footwear, which edged down by 4.2 per cent between December and January in contrast to a smaller fall of 3.1 per cent the year before.

Andrew Sentance, a senior economic adviser at PWC, said he expected UK economic growth to hit around 1.5 per cent for both this year and next, despite rising inflation squeezing consumer spending.

"The trend is clearly towards higher inflation, however, and we should expect the rate of price increases to rise above the two per cent Bank of England target in the next few months.

"By the end of this year, inflation is likely to be around three per cent and possibly even higher. Rising energy prices and the weakness of the pound are the main factors behind this expected increase."

The Retail Prices Index, a separate measure of inflation that includes housing costs, rose to 2.6 per cent, up from 2.5 per cent in December.

A spokesman for the Treasury said it had cut taxes and frozen fuel duty to help families concerned about the cost of living.

At Westminster, Baroness Kramer, the Lib Dems’ economy spokeswoman, said: “The Brexit squeeze is beginning to hit people’s pockets. The falling pound means the cost of food and fuel are rapidly increasing and the people who will pay the price are those who can least afford it.

“For all Theresa May’s talk of wanting to help the Just About Managing, her plan for Hard Brexit is making people worse off. She and the Conservative Party will be held to account when people find their pay packets don’t stretch as far in future,” she added.