Arab Times

Britain on verge of a interest rate hike

Focus on Brexit, trade war

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LONDON, Aug 1, (AFP): The Bank of England appears set Thursday to hike interest rates to combat high inflation, as it eyes fallout from both Brexit and the global trade war, economists say.

Policymake­rs are widely expected to ramp up the British central bank’s main interest rate by a quarter-point to 0.75 percent — which would be the highest level in more than nine years.

The BoE’s nine-strong monetary policy committee (MPC) will reveal the outcome of its August gathering at 1100 GMT.

No change is anticipate­d in quantitati­ve easing stimulus policy, which has been in place alongside ultra-low rates since the aftermath of the global financial crisis.

“The market is confident we are in for an August rate rise,” said Laith Khalaf, senior analyst at stockbroke­r Hargreaves Lansdown.

Brexit-facing Britain was the only G7 economy to experience a slowdown in 2017, the Office for National Statistics highlighte­d this week.

However, it also noted that growth has been more resilient than was initially expected after the Brexit referendum in 2016.

“The bank would dearly love to normalise monetary policy, if only to give itself a bit of ammunition to ward off an economic slowdown,” Khalaf added.

“Moreover, last time the MPC met, three members voted for a rate rise, which now means only two doves need to become hawks for policy to tighten.”

Rising interest rates are a boon for savers but ramp up the cost of credit for consumers and companies.

In June, the MPC panel had voted 6-3 to keep the rate on hold at 0.50 percent, as chief economist Andy Haldane joined those calling for a rise. The previous decision in May had been 7-2 in favour of no change.

BoE governor Mark Carney has meanwhile warned that the global trade war, spearheade­d by US President Donald Trump, is damaging the outlook.

Despite the gloom, most economists believe above-target inflation will persuade policymake­rs to hike, although weak manufactur­ing survey data has injected some caution.

The central bank will also unveil its latest quarterly economic forecasts on Thursday.

Britain’s 12-month inflation rate has now held above the BoE’s official 2.0-percent target range since February 2017 — or for the last 17 months in a row.

“The new inflation forecast should reflect a high risk of a target-overshoot by 2020,” said analyst Danielle Haralambou­s at the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit.

“This, combined with a broader desire to normalise the policy stance to give some room for manoeuvre ahead of the next cyclical downturn, should convince a majority of MPC members to vote for a hike.”

The BoE had implemente­d an emergency quarter-point rate cut to a record low 0.25 percent in August 2016 on fears over the economic impact of the Brexit vote.

However, it then lifted borrowing costs back up to 0.50 percent last November to help bring down inflation.

That was the first UK interest rate hike in more than a decade, since 2007.

“If the bank does increase rates it will be a pretty symbolic moment — the first time since the financial crisis that rates have moved above 0.50 percent,” said Khalaf.

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