Emer Moreau
Emer Moreau covers how economic shifts filter down to everyday prices, pay and spending, joining official data with the small decisions households and workers make. She reports on business and finance for the BBC, with a focus on personal finance, retail and labour markets.
Inflation, food prices and the cost of living
Moreau tracks inflation through the lens of food and everyday essentials, explaining what headline numbers mean for household budgets. In her coverage of inflation holding at 2.8% as food price rises slowed, she sets out how changes in meat, dairy and vegetable prices feed into the overall rate and highlights the differing pressures on transport and food costs. She has examined why food prices have risen so sharply in recent years, detailing the role of climate impacts on crops, global supply shocks and higher business costs in driving sustained increases in supermarket bills.
Her reporting extends to how grocery inflation shapes consumer behaviour, including work on people cutting back on fast food while still seeking smaller “indulgences” in branded grocery products as prices remain high. Across these pieces she consistently links official inflation data to specific product categories and shopping patterns, giving readers a clear picture of how macroeconomic trends show up at the till.
Household spending and consumer behaviour
A recurring thread in Moreau’s work is how households adjust their spending as prices and incomes move. She has reported on people buying less takeaway food and rebalancing towards supermarket treats in response to high grocery prices, drawing on market research to show which categories are growing and which are being squeezed. Beyond food, she has used social posts and call-outs to recruit UK households to track their weekly spending at supermarkets, cafés and restaurants, underpinning features on how budgets are managed under pressure.
Her coverage often starts from lived experience and then brings in data, surveys and expert analysis, allowing her to show both the numbers and the day-to-day trade-offs behind them. This interest in spending habits sits alongside her broader focus on personal finance, including mortgages and household bills, as reflected in her public descriptions of her role.
Labour market, work and jobseekers
Moreau also reports on the world of work, with pieces on job vacancies, young jobseekers and workplace trends. She has written about the fall in the number of job vacancies to a five-year low, setting that story alongside her inflation coverage to show how changes in the labour market interact with the broader economy. In her professional updates she highlights features on young jobseekers struggling to find work, signalling an ongoing interest in how labour market conditions affect people starting out in their careers.
In broadcast and digital segments she contributes to explainer formats on work and careers, including pieces on “job hugging” and other employment trends for BBC business programming. This strand of her beat connects employment statistics, corporate behaviour and worker experience, adding texture to her business and finance reporting.
Role and format
Moreau works as a business journalist for the BBC, covering personal finance, retail, markets and related economic stories. Her work appears across online, video and social formats, including business reports, explainers and collaborative segments with presenters on economic and workplace topics. She uses audience call-outs to source case studies on mortgages, transport and household spending, feeding into features that combine official data with first-hand accounts.
Alongside her BBC role, she has had experience reporting on local news, government and politics, crime and entertainment, which informs her ability to situate economic stories within wider social and policy contexts. Across her current portfolio, her defining focus is the intersection of macroeconomic indicators with the everyday financial realities of consumers and workers.
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