The fragile ceasefire between Israel and Iran has held for a second day, but the truce is already showing cracks. After the first breach on Tuesday night, when an Israeli drone struck a suspected Iranian position in Syria, both sides have pulled back from the brink, and Whitehall is breathing a cautious sigh of relief. For the average British family, the dinner table conversation has shifted from the price of a loaf to the prospect of a wider war. But what does a standoff in the Middle East mean for the port of Liverpool, the factories of the Midlands, and the high streets of the North? The answer lies in the kitchen table economics that I have spent my career dissecting.
Let us be clear: the cost of this instability is not measured in military hardware alone. It is measured in the price of petrol at the pump, the cost of heating a home, and the value of the pound in a pocket. When Middle Eastern tensions flare, oil prices spike. Brent crude climbed by 4% on Tuesday after the truce breach, pushing the average UK petrol price above 145p per litre. For a family running a ten-year-old Ford Focus, that is an extra £5 per fill-up. For the 4.5 million households in fuel poverty, it is a choice between a warm meal and a full tank. The RAC has warned that further volatility could push prices past 150p, a threshold that would ripple through delivery costs, supermarket shelves, and the bottom line of every small business from Newcastle to Newquay.
Meanwhile, the government's response has been characteristically measured. The Foreign Office issued a statement urging restraint, while the Treasury quietly pointed at existing support like the Household Support Fund. But let us not forget the deepest wound: the lingering cost of living crisis. The Bank of England might cut rates later this year, but that will not help the family whose rent has risen by 20% in two years. The truce in the Middle East will not lower their food bills. The Resolution Foundation calculates that the poorest fifth of households spend 14% of their income on energy and transport combined, compared to just 6% for the richest. So when Iran and Israel rattle sabres, it is the poor who feel the tremor most.
Yet there is a glimmer of hope. With the guns silent for now, the government can turn back to its domestic agenda. The fall of inflation from double digits to 3.2% has been a relief, but it masks regional disparities. In my native North East, wages are 15% below the UK average, and unemployment among young people in some ex-mining towns tops 10%. The truce offers a chance to focus on the real economy: the factories that need investment, the ports that need upgrades, and the families that need a pay rise. But that requires more than a pause in airstrikes. It requires a strategy that does not see a war in the Levant as a distraction from the war on poverty at home.
I spoke with Susan, a home care worker in Doncaster, who said she felt “helpless” watching the news. Her petrol bill has jumped, and her wages have not. She is one of the millions who have no control over geopolitics but bear the consequences. The government is right to support the truce and stabilise the region. But the test of that support will be whether it extends to the very real battles being fought on British soil: against stagnant wages, high rents, and the grinding cost of living. The truce in the Middle East is a welcome breath of air, but it is not a solution. The solution is here, in the streets of Doncaster, the docks of Hull, and the high streets of every town that has felt the chill of the last four years. Britain has backed stability abroad. Now it must back it at home.








