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Economy News Spotlights

Bank of England raises rates to 4.5% and sees slow inflation fall

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(Reuters) – The Bank of England raised its key interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to 4.5% on Thursday, taking borrowing costs to their highest since 2008 with its 12th consecutive rate rise, as it seeks to curb the fastest inflation of any major economy.

The central bank no longer predicts a recession after it revised up its growth forecasts from gloomy numbers released in February, the biggest such improvement since it first published forecasts in 1997.

But it also now expects inflation to be slower to fall than it had hoped, mostly due to unexpectedly big and persistent rises in food prices.

“If there were to be evidence of more persistent pressures, then further tightening in monetary policy would be required,” the BoE said, retaining the same guidance on future actions that it had in February and March.

A Reuters poll last week showed most economists expected the BoE to keep rates on hold after a quarter-point rise in May, but shortly before Thursday’s decision interest rate futures were pricing in a 5% peak for rates this autumn.

The pound rose almost half a cent against the U.S. dollar, topping $1.26, while British government bond yields jumped in response to the BoE’s move.

Policymakers voted 7-2 for May’s increase, in line with economists’ expectations in the Reuters poll as Monetary Policy Committee members Silvana Tenreyro and Swati Dhingra again expressed their opposition to further tightening.

The BoE was the first major central bank to start raising borrowing costs in December 2021, but it has been accused by critics of not moving aggressively enough as inflation headed towards a four-decade high of 11.1% struck in October.

Last week, the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank both raised their benchmark borrowing rates by 25 basis points. While Fed Chair Jerome Powell hinted at a pause, ECB President Christine Lagarde said it was too soon to stop.

Britain’s high inflation problem stems largely from its heavy dependence on imported natural gas for power generation, leaving it particularly exposed to the surge in energy prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year.

Energy prices have now fallen sharply and the central bank expects inflation to drop to 5.1% by the end of this year from 10.1% in March. But this is less of a decline than the drop to 3.9% it forecast in February and the BoE predicts inflation will not return to its 2% target until early 2025.

Higher forecasts for food prices had added about 1 percentage point to future inflation compared with February, the BoE said.

Most BoE policymakers see “significant” upward risks to these inflation forecasts. Taking this into account, inflation is not forecast to significantly undershoot its target at any point in the next few years, even if interest rates rise by a further quarter point or more.

The BoE is worried that recent strong headline pay growth could turn into a long-lasting problem for the economy.

“Pay rates could plateau at rates above those consistent with the 2% inflation target sustainably in the medium term,” the central bank said.

The BoE forecast much stronger wage growth and lower unemployment than three months ago.

BoE Chief Economist Huw Pill said last month that British businesses and individuals had to accept that their earnings had fallen in inflation-adjusted terms, triggering a wave of criticism from trade unions and some former BoE rate-setters.

The BoE forecast the economy would grow 0.25% this year – compared with its February prediction of a 0.5% contraction.

Cheaper energy, fiscal stimulus and improved business and consumer confidence mean the BoE now no longer predicts recession this year, and expects the economy to be 2.25% larger in three years’ time than it did before.

The government’s budget announced in March was expected to boost economic output by around 0.5% over the coming years.

The BoE estimated that around a third of past interest rate hikes had fed through to households and businesses, a slower pass-through than in previous tightening cycles because of a higher share of homeowners with fixed rate mortgages.

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