The Office for National Statistics said consumer price inflation was 3 per cent in the year to September, up from the previous month's 2.9 per cent.
The increase, which brings the rate to its highest level since March 2012, was widely anticipated in the markets and was largely due to rising prices for food and a range of transport costs.
Though he's spared that letter-writing, Carney and the others on the bank's rate-setting panel are expected to raise the benchmark rate by a quarter point from the record low of 0.25 per cent at the next policy meeting on November 2.
September's inflation figures were the last before the meeting, giving the numbers even more clout. After the last meeting, when seven of the nine panel members voted for unchanged rates, Carney put financial markets on notice that interest rates were likely to rise in the "coming months."
The expected rise in rates comes despite signs that the British economy is faltering it is growing slower than any other Group of Seven industrial economy this year and that inflation is expected to ease back down in coming months.
The pound was little changed by the inflation numbers as most investors have already priced in a likely November rate hike. In late-morning trading, it was up 0.1 percent at $1.3268.
One of the main reasons why inflation has spiked over the past year is related to the pound's sharp fall since the country voted to leave the European Union in June 2016.
However, the impact of the lower exchange rate on inflation is set to ease as the annual change of prices due to the pound's decline drops out of the comparison.
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