The Sunday Telegraph

Bank is once again behind the curve on interest rates

Haunted by past mistakes, the Monetary Policy Committee is making short-sighted decisions

- LIAM HALLIGAN Follow Liam on X @liamhallig­an

The Bank of England’s decision to freeze interest rates for the fifth time in a row means that since last August, the central bank’s main lending rate, a benchmark for borrowing costs across the economy, has been 5.25pc – a 15-year high.

While “no change” was the expected outcome, the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) – the nine economists who vote to set rates – missed a major opportunit­y at Thursday’s meeting.

Three years ago, the MPC was far too cautious during the upswing of the current interest rate cycle, raising rates too late and too slowly. As a result, inflation probably increased more than it otherwise would have – hitting 11.1pc in September 2022, a 40-year high – worsening the UK’s cost of living crisis.

And now, as the global rate cycle reverses, the Bank is compoundin­g that error by being far too cautious to bring rates back down. No one is saying that monetary policy is easy. But it strikes me that the MPC, seriously short of genuine cognitive diversity and intellectu­al heft, is again making short-sighted decisions that are causing unnecessar­y damage.

In February, the consumer price index was 3.4pc up on the same month last year, down from 4pc in January. Headline inflation, we learnt last week, is now at a two and a half-year low.

On the one hand, housing costs continue to rise sharply, with the average private sector rent some 9pc higher in February than a year earlier – the biggest percentage increase in almost a decade.

Prices rises for food and eating out, though, have been slowing – with food inflation, a staggering 19.2pc in March 2023 and still 7pc in January, falling sharply to 5pc last month.

Fuel prices have helped tame headline inflation too, with petrol and diesel prices actually lower – by 3.9pc and 10.7pc respective­ly – than a year ago. But with headline inflation still well above the 2pc official target, the MPC voted to keep rates on hold.

It is encouragin­g that two MPC members who last month voted to raise rates have now opted for “no change”. But the committee still voted eight-to-one to hold.

Having said that, the MPC’s accompanyi­ng statement its decision suggests the committee is becoming more confident that underlying inflation pressures are fading. This shift in tone is important.

“In recent weeks we’ve seen further encouragin­g signs that inflation is coming down,” said the MPC. “We’re not yet at the point where we can cut interest rates, but things are moving in the right direction.”

Andrew Bailey, the Bank Governor, went on to say that, amid evidence that wages were no longer fuelling inflation, rate cuts were now “in play” at future MPC meetings.

Money markets are now pricing in a quarter-point interest rate cut in June, with another two such cuts likely by the end of the year, taking the base rate from 5.25pc to 4.5pc. The prospect of lower rates means fixed-rate mortgage pricing started to ease earlier this year, dropping below 4pc for loans backed up by hefty deposits.

Some lenders have lifted mortgage rates slightly in recent weeks, in part because of fears geopolitic­al turmoil could aggravate inflation by pushing up global oil and gas prices, delaying MPC rate cuts. The overall trend, though, is down – with the average two-year fixed rate falling from 6.70pc in September 2023 to 5.76pc now, according to Moneyfacts.

Savers, meanwhile, have benefited from interest rates at their highest level for a decade and a half.

Three years ago, as the UK began to emerge from lockdown, the MPC was woefully slow to understand that a lifting of Covid-era restrictio­ns, together with the creation of some £400bn under the guise of a renewed dose of “quantitati­ve easing”, was likely to cause price spikes.

CPI inflation was just 0.7pc back in March 2021, significan­tly below the Bank’s 2pc target. Yet this column still warned that lingering supply chain failures combined with “huge post-lockdown demand … and this new QE variant … means inflation could soon surge” – and I was far from alone.

Bailey continued to insist, though, until the late autumn of 2021, that despite the damage done to global supply chains during the pandemic, and the wall of post-lockdown demand, that UK inflation was “transitory”. It has turned out instead to be stubborn and long-lasting .

Yes, the escalation of hostilitie­s in Ukraine in February 2022 roiled world commodity markets, aggravatin­g inflation as energy prices shot up. But even in January 2022, the month before Putin’s invasion, UK inflation was already at a 30-year high.

It is the spectre of that mistake, and the damage it did to the MPC’s credibilit­y, that haunts the committee now. Members are determined to demonstrat­e how tough they now are on inflation.

Last Thursday, Switzerlan­d’s central bank took markets by surprise, cutting their target rate by a quarter of a per cent, becoming the first central bank in the developed world to initiate a rate-cutting cycle – an impressive show of genuine independen­ce from which the MPC could learn.

The Federal Reserve, despite having held rates last week, is now firmly signalling US rate cuts are coming soon.

The reality is that, for all the Bank of England’s performati­ve handwringi­ng, the global interest rate cycle has shifted – and the MPC, lacking the grit and courage to act unilateral­ly, will ultimately fall into line behind other central banks.

‘Money markets are now pricing in a quarterpoi­nt interest rate cut in June’

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