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Overbaked prices? What Greggs’ sausage roll and Pret’s meal deal say about how much Britons will pay

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When George Osborne came unstuck with his “pastygate” budget 13 years ago, a Greggs sausage roll cost 66p: a price from another planet for consumers in 2025.The Conservative chancellor’s plan to impose VAT on hot food – including Cornish pasties and sausage rolls – would have imposed a 20% price rise.The backlash – led in part by the Newcastle-based bakery chain – was swift: Osborne, branded posh and out of touch, was forced into an embarrassing U-turn.Since pastygate, the price of a Greggs sausage roll has almost doubled to £1.30, as consumers face a renewed rise in food price inflation.

Growing numbers of people are stopping to think twice about buying a takeaway treat or grabbing their lunch on the go, as the cost of living squeeze pushes consumers to the limits of what they are willing to spend,While its prices have risen, Greggs’s share price has halved in a year amid a slowdown in sales growth,In July its boss was forced to deny that Britain has reached “peak Greggs”,Other on-the-go food retailers, including Pret a Manger, are also testing consumer appetite for pricier baked goods, salads, sandwiches and coffees,“There’s a limit to how much people are prepared to pay for certain products,” said Richard Lim, the chief executive of the consultancy Retail Economics.

“It’s snapped for some consumers with some products.”He warned Labour could take some flak.“There’s a level of awareness [among consumers] that a lot of the inflationary pressures they’re facing have been the result of some of the decisions the government have made.”At the height of the pastygate scandal, the now chancellor Rachel Reeves joined Ed Miliband and Ed Balls – the then Labour leader and shadow chancellor – on a trip to Greggs in Redditch for a media stunt at Osborne’s expense.Buying eight sausage rolls (£4.

70), it came a day after Osborne admitted to MPs he could not remember when he last had a Greggs pasty.As Reeves now prepares her November budget, Greggs’s sausage rolls are a talking point on TikTok among Britons nostalgic for pre-pandemic prices, scoring millions of hits on the social media platform, while the price of Pret sandwiches, salads and coffees are the recurring theme of outraged Reddit threads.Official figures show headline UK inflation is running at 3.8%, the highest rate in the G7 and almost twice the Bank of England’s 2% target.Rising food and drink prices have powered much of the increase, with the rate of food inflation expected to peak above 5% this autumn.

Prices for fast food and takeaways – including cooked pastry-based snacks, sandwiches and hot drinks – are rising faster than general inflation, with an increase of 33% since 2020.Business leaders have said that the £25bn increase in employer national insurance contributions has forced them to raise prices, to pass on costs.Any further tax rises would compound the problem, they say.But companies could find it harder to squeeze the British consumer with further price increases after the eye-watering rises of the past five years.“Consumers are being much more careful,” said Lim.

“The big thing for consumers is that, while inflation is down from the peak a few years ago [of 11,1% in late 2022], this does not mean prices are falling,The level is significantly higher,“For some categories – on-the-go food and coffee might be one of them – prices are meeting a level where they are really testing that elasticity of demand,”Earlier this month Pret announced it was caving in to competition from supermarkets by launching meal deals, while its owner, JAB, wrote down the value of the chain by a third amid “intense strains” on the hospitality industry.

Pret raised eyebrows earlier this year after launching a “premium” £12,95 lunchtime salad, having prompted a social media backlash two years ago with a £7,15 “posh” cheese and pickle baguette,Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionHowever, its boss, Pano Christou, has hit back against criticism that Pret is trop cher,“We’re not expensive,” he told the Sunday Times last weekend, in an interview defending Pret’s £5.

50 baguettes, £3.95 flat whites and £2.90 cups of tea.Some of the chain’s prices – including for its £4.50 “classic super club” sandwich have been cut in the past year, while bosses believe its £8.

95 lobster roll is the cheapest on the market, helping its sales to boom,The rise of food price inflation is hitting Britain’s poorest households disproportionately hard,Official figures released this month show the poorest fifth of households slashed their spending on food by 5% in real terms last year,Despite sky-high inflation, the richest fifth maintained their spending,The Treasury said it was taking action to help families, including through free breakfast clubs for all primary schoolchildren and expanding free school meals.

“We know that while the economy isn’t broken, for working people it feels stuck,” a spokesperson said.Despite the mounting pressure on living costs, official figures show household savings remain above pre-pandemic levels.Annual wage growth is also running above inflation.However, not everyone has benefited equally, recent strong levels of pay growth are fading, unemployment is rising, and talk of tax rises is all over the media.Consumer confidence has fallen sharply in recent months, in a development economists say could translate into weaker levels of household spending in the near future.

Dean Turner, a UK economist at UBS Wealth Management, said some companies were probably facing a decline in sales amid shifting consumer preferences.Greggs has blamed hot weather this summer for harming its sales, as consumers were put off buying a hot snack.While a trend for healthier food, in an increasingly budget-conscious nation, is also hitting takeaway food retailers.“There is clearly pricing power in certain areas of the economy – the Instagram economy, I call it, of experiences, restaurants, activities, and entertainment.“But it does seem that spending is shifting away elsewhere as people prioritise those other aspects, because the simple thing is you’ve got high inflation and your wages aren’t increasing as much.

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Clarks opens up a shoebox of memories with museum to mark 200th year

For some visitors, the museum may bring back memories of being fitted for their first pair of school shoes on a rather chilly metal gauge. For others, the cabinets of pristine Wallabees and Desert Boots may recall teenage obsessions with US hip-hop or Britpop movements.Memories will also flood back for the many local people whose families made Clarks shoes for generations, when the box-fresh Shoemakers Museum opens in the Somerset village of Street, near Glastonbury, on Thursday.Nicky Dowding, collections manager, said some visitors may be surprised at how far a very British brand, which is celebrating its 200th anniversary this year, spread across the globe. “In the UK, Clarks is often associated with school shoes but within audiences across the world it’s perceived in very different ways,” she said

1 day ago
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Laneway festival 2026: Chappell Roan leads lineup featuring Wet Leg, Wolf Alice and PinkPantheress

US pop star Chappell Roan will headline next year’s Laneway festival in Australia and New Zealand – another coup for the festival, which was headlined by Charli xcx this year.In exclusive appearances for Laneway, this will be Roan’s first New Zealand show ever, and her first Australian shows since her global ascension in 2024. The 27-year-old artist will perform the full 90-minute production that pulled the biggest crowd at Reading and Leeds festival last month, complete with fantasy castle stage set, an all-female band and gothic fairytale costumes heavily indebted to drag.The scale of these shows will be in stark contrast to 2023, when the artist toured small venues on Australia’s east coast after the release of her debut album, The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess. Hits including Pink Pony Club, Good Luck Babe and the recent The Giver have seen Roan graduate from camp cult favourite to bona fide superstar, headlining Coachella and Lollapalooza, and drawing record crowds with shows that are high on energy, sex and maximalist theatrics

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: Republicans ‘working very hard to capitalize’ on Charlie Kirk’s killing

Late-show hosts recap Donald Trump’s chilly reception in the UK, his corrupt business deals with the UAE and Maga’s fearmongering around the “radical left”.On Monday night, Trump became the first US president to sue the New York Times, for defamation to the tune of $15bn. “Where does he even come up with this?” wondered Jimmy Kimmel on Tuesday evening. “These are like numbers my children make up when they’re talking about money.”“I thought he said the New York Times was failing,” he added

2 days ago
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‘The storm for Lear is inside him’: Crossing choppy seas to bring Shakespeare to Isles of Scilly

RSC touring troupe stage King Lear in a school hall on St Mary’s before continuing to the Isle of Wight“Blow, winds, and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!” King Lear, Act III, Scene 2A fierce wind and strong swell had turned the Atlantic into a rollercoaster and when the troupe made landfall on the Isles of Scilly, several members felt rather wobbly and looked a little green around the gills.The life of a touring actor is not always glitz and glamour, but the first visit of the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC) to Scilly – to perform King Lear – got off to a particularly rocky start.“It was a rough crossing,” said Oliver Senton, who plays Lear, as the 15-strong cast and crew recovered on the harbourside of St Mary’s, the largest of the islands, 30 miles off the south-west coast of mainland Britain. “We’re more used to being in a van or train when we’re going place to place. But it’s wonderful to be here, breaking territory, bringing theatre to new places

2 days ago
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Seth Meyers: ‘Trump clearly has no answer to Putin’s aggression’

As several late-night hosts take a break for the Emmys – which went to the Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Sunday night – Seth Meyers looked into Donald Trump’s lack of international leadership.On Monday’s Late Night, Meyers pointed out the hypocrisy behind the Trump’ administration’s foreign policy agenda. “Trump and the GOP spent years whining that Democrats were supposedly leading from behind, and have now declared that America will be setting the world’s agenda,” he explained. “No more waiting for other countries to act – America acts first and other countries follow us. You got that, world?”Except earlier this week, Trump announced on Truth Social that he was ready to enact sanctions against Russia for flying drones into Poland’s airspace … but not until all Nato nations had agreed to stop buying oil from Russia

3 days ago
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What do the circus and US politics have in common? Ask these Black and brown circus artists

International Black Indigenous Circus Week in Philadelphia brings together artists specializing in aerial, juggling clowning and more for various panels and showsIn an industrial building in north Philadelphia, teal and red fabric used for aerial tricks dangled from the high ceiling. Alyssa Bigbee, the co-founder of the Philadelphia-based International Black Indigenous Circus Week, called on five performers to circle around for the first rehearsal of their circus show titled The Rebellion: Anarchy. “Remember to breathe. Remember to pace yourself,” Bigbee told the group of mostly Black and brown artists. “Lean on each other and feed off of each other in terms of energy

4 days ago
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Australia’s fossil fuel earnings set to fall by $50bn a year by 2035

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Three people died when Optus network upgrade affected triple zero calls, CEO confirms

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What is new in UK-US tech deal and what will it mean for the British economy?

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UK is going to be ‘AI superpower’, says Nvidia boss as he invests £500m

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Prelim stage set for Nick Daicos and Will Ashcroft to stake claim as generation’s best | Martin Pegan

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Pressure is a privilege for England who must deliver when it matters against France | Ugo Monye

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