Inflation is expected to have eased at the start of the year, giving consumers a further reprieve from the Brexit-induced jump in the cost of living.

A consensus of economists are expecting the Office for National Statistics’ (ONS) January Consumer Price Index (CPI) to come in at 2.9% on Tuesday, down from 3% in December and easing further from the most recent peak of 3.1% in November.

Britons are believed to have benefited from slower food price inflation – which surged as a weak pound made imports more expensive – as well as a less notable rise in petrol prices compared with a year earlier.

Petrol price
Petrol pump prices will also be monitored as part of the CPI report (PA)

If Tuesday’s ONS figures match forecasts, it would mark the second drop for consumer inflation since June.

But some experts, including Investec economist Victoria Clarke, are expecting inflation to hold steady at 3%.

“January numbers will be accompanied by the new weightings for the CPI basket, which add an extra layer of uncertainty to the upcoming release.

“This time around we are working on the assumption that the transport services category, air fares particularly, will apply some upward pressure to the 12-month inflation rate, with the month-to-month drop in prices likely to be less than in January last year,” she said.

Ms Clarke said that there are also reports of clothing retailers scaling back promotions after Christmas, when they were able to sell more stock.

It leaves more goods being sold at full prices, and leading to upward pressure from the clothing category in January.

The Bank of England – which kept interest rates on hold at 0.5% last week – said it wanted inflation to return to its 2% target within the “more conventional” time frame of two years, rather than three, raising the prospect of further and faster hikes.

Its quarterly report showed rising oil prices would add to cost pressures over the next year or so, which could temporarily push CPI back above 3%, taking longer to return back to target.

The last official CPI reading came in at 3% in December, thanks to a drop in air fares which counted for a smaller slice of the basket of goods and services in 2017 than the year before.

Falling price tags on clothes and toys also pulled costs lower, while food and non-alcoholic drinks recorded smaller monthly growth.

Oxford Economics lead UK economist Martin Beck said: “A fall in annual CPI inflation last December to 3% from the previous month’s 3.1% was only the second month in 2017 to see a decline in the CPI rate.

“And we think hopes that this marked the start of a consistent move down in price pressures may be supported by January’s outturn.”

While he admitted the rising cost of oil seems to counter that prediction, the rise in prices at the pump has been “modest” compared with those seen a year earlier.

Mr Beck said: “And further evidence that the effect of past weakness in sterling has peaked, as well as the pound’s rally since last November, should also have put some downward pressure on inflation.

“Consequently, we think the annual measure dipped to 2.9%.”