Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bank of England maintains high interest rate

- PAN PYLAS

LONDON — The Bank of England kept its main interest rate unchanged at a 16-year high of 5.25% on Thursday even though inflation continues to drop from multidecad­e peaks.

The decision was widely anticipate­d in financial markets and comes a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve also left its key interest rate unchanged. But unlike the Fed, the Bank of England gave few explicit indication­s that it was getting ready to cut borrowing costs soon.

The Swiss National Bank went the other way Thursday, with a surprise cut to its main interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point.

Market expectatio­ns that lower interest rates are on the horizon were strengthen­ed Wednesday with news that U.K. inflation fell to a 2.5-year low of 3.4% in February — more than anticipate­d — and is now not far off the Bank of England’s target rate of 2%.

The bank’s rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee acknowledg­ed that inflation has been trending lower and could fall below the 2% target in the second quarter of the year.

However, it said that “key indicators of inflation persistenc­e remain elevated” and that interest rates will “need to remain restrictiv­e for sufficient­ly long” — or at relatively high levels — to get inflation back to its goal.

Central banks around the world raised interest rates aggressive­ly in late 2021 from near zero to counter price rises first stoked by supply chain issues during the coronaviru­s pandemic and then by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which pushed up food and energy costs.

Higher interest rates — which cool the economy by making it more expensive to borrow, thereby bearing down on spending — have contribute­d to easing inflation worldwide, though they also have affected economic activity.

Britain’s governing Conservati­ve Party hopes that lower inflation and the ensuing decline in interest rates may trigger a feel-good factor ahead of a general election that has to take place by January 2025.

Opinion polls show the main opposition Labour Party way ahead and on track for a big victory over the Conservati­ves, who have been in power since 2010.

Most speculatio­n is that Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will call an election in the fall, when the economic backdrop is likely to be more benign than it is now.

 ?? (AP) ?? A woman walks past the Bank of England in London’s financial district in 2023.
(AP) A woman walks past the Bank of England in London’s financial district in 2023.

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