Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Bank of England hikes interest rates . . . sees inflation hitting 10 percent

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LONDON. — The Bank of England (BOE) yesterday raised interest rates to their highest level in 13 years in a bid to tackle soaring inflation. In a widely expected move, policymake­rs at the BOE voted for a fourth consecutiv­e rate hike since December at a time when millions of UK households are grappling with skyrocketi­ng living costs.

The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee approved a 25-basis point increase by a majority of 6-3, taking the base interest rate up to 1 percent.

The Bank said the members in the minority preferred to increase interest rates by 0,5 percentage points to 1,25 percent.

Like many central banks around the world, the BOE is tasked with steering the economy through an inflation surge that has been exacerbate­d by Russia’s unprovoked onslaught in Ukraine.

Annual UK inflation hit a 30- year high of 7 percent in March — more than three times the BOE’s target level — as food and energy prices continue to surge.

UK consumer confidence, meanwhile, plunged to a near record low in April amid fears of slowing economic growth.

The Bank expects UK inflation to rise to roughly 10 percent this year as a result of the Russia-Ukraine war and lockdowns in China.

It has also warned prices are likely to rise faster than income for many people, deepening the cost of living crisis.

Sterling hit a low of 1,2393 against the dollar yesterday afternoon London time, the lowest level since July 1, 2020.

The UK currency was last seen trading at US$1,2405, down more than 1,7 percent.

“Global inflationa­ry pressures have intensifie­d sharply following Russia–Ukraine war,” the Bank’s MPC said.

“This has led to a material deteriorat­ion in the outlook for world and UK growth.”

“A very narrow path”

“The point being is — we are walking this very narrow path now,” Governor Andrew Bailey said at a press conference when asked why the Bank had taken its decision to raise rates.

“The proximate reason for raising (the) bank rate at this point is not only the current profile of inflation and what is to come and of course what that could mean for inflation expectatio­ns to come — but the risks as well,” Bailey said.

The BOE chief had previously said the Bank may look to take a more incrementa­l approach to tightening rather than following the US Federal Reserve with a 50-basis point hike.

The US central bank on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate to a target rate range of

between 0,75 percent and 1 percent. It marked the Fed’s biggest rate hike in two decades and its most aggressive step yet in its fight against a 40-year high in inflation.

In its updated forecasts, the Bank highlighte­d the looming recession risk for the world’s fifth-largest economy.

The BOE said it now expects gross domestic product to contract in the final three months of the year, partly reflecting the projected large hike in household energy bills in October.

It is at this time that the Bank also sees UK inflation reaching its peak of 10,2 percent — the highest level since 1982.

“UK GDP growth is expected to slow sharply over the first half of the forecast period,” the Bank said.

“That predominan­tly reflects the significan­t adverse impact of the sharp rises in global energy and tradable goods prices on most UK households’ real incomes and many UK companies’ profit margins.”

“Autopilot mode”

“The combinatio­n of slower growth and higher inflation is a challenge for many policymake­rs, and is reflected in today’s split vote,” said Hussain Mehdi, macro and investment strategist at HSBC Asset Management.

“However, with inflation set to remain higher for longer in 2022, MPC policy tightening remains in autopilot mode amid concerns over second round effects from tight labour markets,” Mehdi said.

“Looking ahead, energy prices and China lockdowns are key risk factors, but scope for inflation to cool later this year and the impact of a significan­t household income squeeze on growth could eventually push the bank on a more dovish path,” they added.

“In my view, the combinatio­n of the pandemic and Brexit has changed the fundamenta­ls of the UK economy — particular­ly its ability to generate persistent inflation,” said Karen Ward, chief EMEA market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management.

“The Bank will have to keep raising rates to bring inflation down, but a gradual approach, as taken today, is understand­able given the nature of the current risks,” Ward said.

“If post-pandemic pent-up demand continues to overwhelm the headwind of higher prices, then demand will remain resilient. In which case the BOE still has some way to go in this hiking cycle.”

“The proximate reason for raising (the) bank rate at this point is not only the current profile of inflation and what is to come and of course what that could mean for inflation expectatio­ns to come — but the risks as well,” —

CNBC. com.

 ?? ?? The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee approved a 25-basis point increase by a majority of 6-3
The Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee approved a 25-basis point increase by a majority of 6-3

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