Money Week

Central banks fall far behind the curve

- Alex Rankine Markets editor

“Surprise, surprise!”, says Ipek Ozkardeska­ya of Swissquote. Last month the Bank of England failed to raise interest rates despite market bets that it would.

This month it has pulled the reverse trick, becoming the first big central bank to raise the cost of borrowing. The 0.15 percentage point rise to 0.25% came despite market bets that Omicron-related uncertaint­y would cause the Bank to keep policy steady. With inflation at an annual rate of 5.1% and predicted to hit 6% next April, the Bank decided it didn’t have the luxury of waiting for more clarity about Omicron.

Fighting for credibilit­y

The interest rate hike is so “marginal” that it is “frankly… unlikely to make much of a difference”, says Jeremy Warner in

The Daily Telegraph. All the same, it is an important signal of intent. After a year spent making increasing­ly unconvinci­ng excuses for soaring inflation, Threadneed­le Street needed to head off speculatio­n that its real objective is to keep government borrowing costs low. The Bank has now shown that “it won’t back excessive spending forever”.

Even those of us who have long supported tighter policy must admit that “this was not a great time” to start raising rates, says David Smith in The Sunday Times. UK “growth was stagnating even before Omicron” and inflation has surged, suggesting a “touch of… stagflatio­n”. The service sector is having a nightmare before Christmas. “By raising rates at a difficult time”, the Bank has at least “won back” some of its lost credibilit­y as a central bank that takes inflation seriously. “Omicron or no Omicron”, the Bank had no choice but to hike, says Liam Halligan in The Daily Telegraph. Inflation is more than two times the 2% target. November’s rate-hike-thatwasn’t debacle had raised serious questions about Threadneed­le Street’s willingnes­s to both raise the Treasury’s borrowing costs and to upset market traders, who love easy money. Credibilit­y is “a must-have for any effective central bank”: if businesses and consumers come to believe that authoritie­s will never act against inflation then it will become “a self-fulfilling prophecy”.

Fed turns hawkish

The US Federal Reserve is also in tightening mode. It says it will reduce its monthly asset purchases twice as fast as previously planned. That leaves the Fed on course to wind up its quantitati­ve-easing programme (whereby it buys bonds with printed money) and start raising US interest rates next spring. The Fed’s latest projection­s show it plans to hike interest rates up to three times during 2022.

For all the fanfare about its newfound hawkishnes­s, “the Fed has effectivel­y committed not to raise rates above 1% in 2022”, says Philip Pilkington on Unherd. Yet annual US inflation is 6.8%. “I do not envy the job of central bankers these days.” Policymake­rs are stuck between the rock of raising rates sharply, which will cause a market crash, and the hard place of doing nothing, which will let inflation rip. The Fed’s solution? “Magically assuming in their projection­s that inflation will disappear” by itself.

 ?? ?? The Bank of England is facing inflation of more than two-and-a-half times the official 2% target
The Bank of England is facing inflation of more than two-and-a-half times the official 2% target
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