Western Mail

Bank may need to do U-turn on rate hikes – warning

- HOLLY WILLIAMS newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

THE Bank of England should raise interest rates today but “stand ready” to reverse the hike if Brexit talks do not go as planned, according to an influentia­l think-tank.

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (Niesr) said the Bank will likely “weigh the consequenc­es of ‘getting it wrong”’ ahead of this week’s vote on whether to raise interest rates to the highest level for more than nine years.

Niesr said the Bank of England should only raise rates gradually and “stand ready to move in either direction should circumstan­ces change”.

“The committee should emphasise the uncertaint­y (rather than the certainty) of its future policy stance in its communicat­ions and its willingnes­s to reverse its decisions,” according to Niesr.

Policy-makers on the Bank’s ninemember Monetary Policy Committee are expected to increase rates from 0.5% to 0.75% in today’s noon decision, but economists believe it will be a split vote.

Niesr’s warning came as its latest set of forecasts pencilled in UK growth of 1.4% this year and 1.7% next year – broadly in line with its previous forecasts.

The prediction­s assume a “soft Brexit” scenario – where the UK achieves close to full access to the EU market for goods and services – and an increase in rates from 0.5% to 0.75% today, with rates hitting 1.25% in 2019.

Niesr said the government’s White Paper Brexit proposals are “more restrictiv­e” than a soft Brexit.

It estimates that if Prime Minister Theresa May’s proposals are achieved, it will cost the economy the equivalent of £500 per person in lost output each year over time, compared with a soft Brexit scenario.

Niesr said this would rise to £800 per person in the event of a “no deal” Brexit.

“These estimates do not include the likely impact on productivi­ty which could, on some estimates, double the size of the losses,” it said.

It said: “The UK economy is facing an unusual level of uncertaint­y because of Brexit.”

“The UK government’s White Paper, which set out its preference­s for that new relationsh­ip, has failed to unite the government or Parliament, leaving open an entire spectrum of possible outcomes,” it added.

Niesr also warned that the government would have to make “significan­t concession­s” to the EU for its White Paper proposals put forward last month to succeed.

On spending, it said pressure to increase funding for the NHS and public-sector workers will fail to see government spending as a share of GDP

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? > Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt
> Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom