KEY POINTS
  • A quarter of Britons have resorted to skipping meals amid worsening inflationary pressures and food scarcity concerns, according to one survey.
  • More than four in five people in the U.K. are worried about rising living costs and their ability to afford basics necessities over the next six months.
  • The findings come after Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey pointed to a forthcoming "apocalyptic" food crisis.
More than four in five people in the U.K. are worried about rising living costs and their ability to afford basics necessities like food and energy over the coming months, according to a new survey.

LONDON — A quarter of Britons have resorted to skipping meals as inflationary pressures and a worsening food crisis conflate in what the Bank of England recently dubbed an "apocalyptic" outlook for consumers.

More than four in five people in the U.K. are worried about rising living costs and their ability to afford basics necessities like food and energy over the coming months, according to a new survey released Tuesday.