British retail sales unexpectedly soared in May at their fastest monthly rate since the series began in 1986, driven by record sales of food and clothes, the Office for National Statistics said this morning.
The Office for National Statistics said sales surged 3.5 per cent last month, putting them up 8.1 per cent on the year. The annual rate was the strongest since April 2002.
Analysts had forecast a monthly fall of 0.1 per cent for an annual rise of 4.1 per cent.
The figures are likely to reinforce market expectations that interest rates will go up before they go down, despite ongoing concerns about a slowdown in growth.
Official retail sales figures have been surprisingly resilient this year, often deviating from anecdotal and survey evidence.
Policymakers expect consumer spending to slow this year as the credit crunch feeds through to the real economy, banks clamp down on lending and pay growth stalls.
The ONS said the sales were driven by food and clothing. Food sales rose 3.3 per cent on the month and textile, clothing and footwear sales leapt 9.2 per cent in May - both the highest since the series began 22 years ago.
Separately, the ONS said public sector borrowing rose more than expected in May.
The public sector net cash requirement was £10.987 billion last month, above expectations for a reading of £6.5 billion and the highest for a May since the series began in 1984.
The public sector net borrowing was £10.955 billion - the highest for a May since that series began in 1993 and the second highest figure for any month.