The Bank of England is preparing an emergency rate decision as the UK economy contracts. The official GDP figures released this morning confirm what many have felt for weeks: the cost of living is rising, and the war in Iran is no longer a far-off geopolitical event. It is a reality playing out on British high streets.
I visited a small electronics shop in Croydon yesterday. The owner, a second-generation British-Pakistani man named Imran, told me his suppliers have doubled their prices for microchips and components. “It’s the sanctions,” he said, gesturing to a shelf of laptops. “These used to be £350. Now they’re £500. People can’t afford it. I can’t afford it.”
This is the human cost of a conflict that began thousands of miles away, but whose economic shockwaves have reached our shores with brutal efficiency. The energy price cap is expected to rise again in April, and petrol prices have already jumped 12p per litre since the escalation in the Strait of Hormuz. Drivers are altering their habits. Instead of weekend trips, they stay local. Instead of buying new, they repair old.
There is a social psychology at play here. We are witnessing a cultural shift in how Britons spend, save, and plan for the future. The optimism that followed the pandemic has curdled into a cautious, almost defensive frugality. The term “discretionary spending” has become a luxury most cannot afford. Even the middle classes are feeling the squeeze. I spoke to a young mother in a Waitrose car park. She used to buy organic. Now she buys own-brand and checks her bank balance before reaching the checkout.
The Bank of England faces a dilemma. An emergency rate cut might stimulate borrowing, but it could also stoke inflation. A rate hike might curb prices but at the cost of slowing growth. Either way, the decision will affect mortgages, rents, and business loans. For millions, that decision will not be abstract. It will be felt in the monthly budget.
Class dynamics are also shifting. The wealthy, insulated by assets and savings, might weather this storm. The poor, already stretched, face impossible choices: heating or eating. But the squeezed middle, the backbone of the British economy, is being hollowed out. They are the ones cutting back on holidays, dining out, and new clothes. They are the ones who voted for stability and now feel betrayed by global events.
Meanwhile, on the streets, life continues. The pub on the corner still does a brisk trade in cheap lager. The charity shops are fuller than ever. And in the cafes, conversations have turned from football to fuel prices. There is a quiet anxiety hanging in the air. People are adapting, as they always do. But there is a sense that the ground is shifting beneath their feet.
The Bank of England will announce its decision tomorrow. Whatever it is, the impact will not be confined to the City. It will be felt in every kitchen table conversation about money, every cancelled gym membership, every “maybe next month” promise. This is the real story of the Iran war: not the bombs falling in the Middle East, but the silent, slow erosion of financial security in Britain.










