Gulf News

Carney’s rate hike drives Brexit wedge

- Jill Ward

The Bank of England’s latest interest-rate increase has become another battlegrou­nd in the vitriolic Brexit debate — yet many of the arguments overlook Governor Mark Carney’s reasoning.

Despite Carney’s press conference and media interviews, some politician­s and economists have been quick to call the move a mistake ahead of Britain’s departure from the European Union, while others said it proves a buoyant economy that has defied Brexit critics.

The BOE’s rationale is that the second hike since the 2016 referendum wasn’t a reaction to booming growth or a vote of confidence in a smooth Brexit. Instead, it’s standard central banking to temper rising inflationa­ry forces in a world that’s changed since the financial crisis.

“There are some — not red flags, but some amber pointers, that would tell you that being on a gradual tightening path is the right place to be at this point,” said Victoria Clarke, an economist at Investec. “They don’t want to be in a position, if Brexit has gone relatively to plan, to then have to suddenly sharply adjust policy and put the brakes on growth.”

BOE policymake­rs, who voted 9-0 in favour of the increase, are trying to strike a balance between taming inflation as the economy runs out of slack, and protecting against the risk that the nation’s Brexit talks will end in a hard rupture that hits growth. Carney said himself on Friday that the risk of the

UK dropping out of the EU without a deal is unlikely, yet still “uncomforta­bly high.”

Neverthele­ss, Brexit defenders said the rate hike was vindicatio­n that the economy was strong and Carney was wrong to warn against the negative consequenc­es of leaving.

Conservati­ve lawmaker Jacob

Rees-Mogg, who at one point called for Carney’s resignatio­n, said on Twitter that the governor “has long been the high priest of project fear, whose reputation for inaccurate and politicall­y motivated forecastin­g has damaged the reputation of the Bank of England.”

Others argued that the economy is just too weak for higher rates with Brexit looming. David Blanchflow­er, a Dartmouth economics professor who sat on the BOE’s rate-setting committee from 2006 to 2009, wrote ina Guardian column that the increase will have to be reversed, and business groups accused the bank of “jumping the gun.”

Speed limit

For its part, the BOE says the UK economy’s speed limit is now lower, meaning it can’t expand as quickly as it could before the financial crisis without generating unwanted price pressures. Weaker productivi­ty growth is another drawback that leads policymake­rs to think that even an historical­ly modest expansion will unleash inflation demons. “We have to reorient ourselves to the current realities,” Carney said in a press conference after the policy announceme­nt. “There are a few uncomforta­ble new normals to reconcile ourselves with.”

With efficiency growth far from its pre-crisis average, unit labour costs — which can drive domestical­ly generated inflation — are growing at levels consistent with the BOE’s inflation target, Carney said. They rose at the fastest pace since the end of 2013 in the first quarter.

Brexit surprises could still lead the bank to change course. But that doesn’t automatica­lly mean rate cuts, Carney argued on Thursday. And if circumstan­ces warrant it, the bank can quickly change tact and loosen policy. For now, he said the BOE has to work with what it sees.

“The mistake is to always wait wait wait until you have perfect certainty,” he said. “You don’t know when that higher degree of certainty is going to transpire.”

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