Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Rate hike ‘could be just the start’

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believes the negative outlook from 51% of finance directors, compared with 6% who said there had been improvemen­ts, is a sign that a sevenyear squeeze on budgets is impacting on patient care. BORIS Johnson has announced a £1 million fund to boost press freedom around the world.

The Foreign Secretary said a free media underpins the universal human right to freedom of expression. The money will be available for press freedom projects in countries where journalist­s and their work are under pressure.

Mr Johnson added: “As a former journalist I am alarmed that attacks on journalist­s are rife and increasing. Civil society is all about free people.” INTEREST rates have been raised for the first time in more than 10 years and the Bank of England signalled more “gradual” increases are on the way to cool surging inflation.

The Bank’s nine-strong Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 7-2 to raise rates from 0.25% to 0.5%, which marks the first increase since July 2007.

The quarter-point rise reverses the emergency cut seen in the aftermath of the Brexit vote shock in 2016 as the Bank sought to head off turmoil in the economy.

Millions of borrowers on variable rate deals will be impacted by the rates decision, which will add around £15 a month to the cost of the average mortgage, while it will offer some relief to savers hit by surging inflation and negligible returns.

Bank governor Mark Carney said: “With unemployme­nt at a 42-year low, inflation running above target and growth just above its new, lower speed limit, the time has come to ease our foot off the accelerato­r.”

The move comes as the Bank looks to dampen Brexit-fuelled inflation, which it predicts will now peak at around 3.2% this autumn. The Bank’s quarterly inflation report is based on financial market expectatio­ns for two more rate hikes over the next three years to return inflation back to its 2% target, which could see rates hit 1% by the end of 2020.

But sterling fell sharply, down more than 1% to 1.31 US dollars and 1.12 euros, as the Bank’s comments over future rises were more cautious than expected.

The milestone rate hike comes as the Bank cut its forecast for growth to 1.6% for 2017 from the 1.7% previously predicted, but held forecasts at 1.6% for 2018 and 1.7% for 2019. It is pencilling in growth of 1.7% for 2020.

Nearly four million households face higher mortgage interest payments follow- ing the hike, although Mr Carney stressed the impact would be modest and gradual, with around 60% of borrowers on fixed rate deals.

He said: “Households are generally well positioned for a rate increase. More are in work than ever before. Only about one fifth of people with mortgages have never experience­d an increase in bank rate.”

Mr Carney added that monetary policy would continue to provide “significan­t support” to the economy.

On the rates decision, Chancellor Philip Hammond tweeted: “Our economy is strong and resilient, supported by independen­t monetary policy and stable prices from the Bank of England.”

There are fears over the timing of the cut, given the uncertaint­y amid Brexit negotiatio­ns and as Britons are being squeezed by paltry wage growth and inflation.

Ian Kernohan, an economist at Royal London Asset Management, said further rate hikes will depend on Brexit.

He added: “With inflation set to fall next year as the impact of sterling devaluatio­n wanes, the MPC will stop hiking if there are clear signs that the economy is slowing.”

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