Inflation growth slowed sharply in August to 1.7% after computer game prices dropped and clothing prices were slow to recover from the summer sales.
The Consumer Prices Index measure of inflation fell below 2.1% in July, according to the Office for National Statistics.
It is the lowest rate since late 2016.
As well as the falling cost of computer games, the ONS said clothing prices rose “less than last year after the end of the summer sales”.
Economists had expected inflation to dip to 1.9% in August.
The sharper fall sent the pound down 0.41% against the dollar to $1.2450.
The fall should benefit households, pushing wage growth further above the rate of inflation. Recent figures showed that pay, excluding bonuses, increased by 3.8% between May and July.
Why has inflation fallen?
The biggest drop in CPI inflation came from the “recreation and culture” sector, where prices fell by 5% in August, in particular in computer games and downloads.
The ONS said: “Price movements for games can often be relatively large, depending on the composition of bestseller charts.”
A hangover from retailers’ summer sales also weighed on clothing and footwear prices.
Although prices rose by 1.8%, it was below the 3.1% increase recorded last August.
Analysis
Andrew Verity, economics correspondent
While cheaper computer games contributed most to the slower rise in the cost of living, today’s inflation figures also give us a hint of price pressures coming down the pipeline – or rather, the lack of them.
The prices charged by food manufacturers to retailers, for example, are down. And prices paid by manufacturers for their raw materials dropped by 0.8% in the year to August.
Much of that was down to falling oil prices. As the global economic slowdown reduced demand around the world, the standard UK measure – the price of a barrel of crude from the North Sea oilfield of Brent – dropped by 19%.
The global slowdown, in other words, has removed much of the upward pressure on prices. On the financial markets, traders currently now anticipate no change to interest rates for at least a year, with the next move more likely to be down than up.