Absolutely, for sure, with no doubt.One wonders whether a cheap £ is intentional government policy.
KudosDave
Succesive governments (of whatever stripe) have indulged in deficit spending, to make themselves popular. They even borrow (thats to say create) money in order to pay off debt that is coming to term, bonds etc. The debt is now so huge that even a small move in interest rates would take a huge slice of GDP in order to just pay said interest, not touching the principle. In fact that's what's been happening for years. So they have two options:
1 Open Default and become an international pariah that no-one wants to lend to.
2 Inflation so paying back debt with pounds that are worth less. A million today does not buy what a million 10 years ago bought. So lower pound = back room boys going,'whoopee'. Let's have some more.
Trouble is, every country in the world is in exactly the same position, so they're all trying to do the same thing. It's a race to the bottom. Which will be the first major currency to hit the wall?
So £/$ or pound /euro, doesn't really matter long term, they will rebalance.
What really matters is that the drive for inflation is robbing the wealth of anyone who is a saver (for old age or whatever). £1000 held for 10 years isn't going to buy much after that time. Inflation figures may not seem high but it is compound. The BofE's target is 2%, that can rob you of a life's savings quicker than you think.