How will higher Bank of England rates affect Britain's
economy?
Send a link to a friend
[October 24, 2017]
By David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England is
widely expected to raise interest rates for the first time in more than
10 years on Nov. 2, after the next meeting of its Monetary Policy
Committee.
Most economists polled by Reuters are not persuaded a rate rise is
necessary, and its symbolic value is likely to overshadow its fairly
modest effect on the economy. [ECILT/GB]
Following is a set of best guesses from economists in academia, the
private sector and at the Bank of England on what a quarter point
increase in rates to 0.5 percent will do, based on models of how the
economy has performed in the past.
PUBLIC REACTION
This cannot be calculated precisely. The British public could take
fright at a first rate increase since 2007, especially at a time of weak
growth as the country prepares to leave the European Union.
While the BoE has ruled out returning rates to their pre-crisis level of
about 5 percent, public or market expectations that this rate hike would
be the first of many could also give it a disproportionate public
impact.
WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO GROWTH?
Britain's economy is growing at around 0.3 percent a quarter this year,
half its long-run average and a slowdown from 2017 after its weakest
start to the year since 2012.
A BoE research paper from 2014 - which represents the views of its
authors, not an official BoE position - estimates that raising rates by
1 percent reduces output by 0.6 percent over a 2-3 year period.
A quarter point rise would trim a modest 0.15 percent from GDP -
equivalent to six weeks' growth at current rates.
Other estimates are slightly higher. Amit Kara, a forecaster at the
National Institute for Economic and Social Research (NIESR) sees an
effect of around 0.2 percent from a quarter point rise, while Martin
Beck of consultants Oxford Economics says it could be up to 0.3 percent
after three years.
"Arguably a rise now could have a magnified effect," Beck said, pointing
to headwinds from Brexit uncertainty and public spending restraint, as
well as a possible shock factor.
Credit Suisse economists think a quarter point rate rise could boost the
chance by around 5 percent of the UK economy tipping into recession,
based on an analysis of factors that have contributed to downturns since
the 1970s.
HOW WILL STERLING REACT?
Sterling gained 4 cents against the U.S. dollar in the 24 hours after
the BoE said last month it was likely to raise rates in the coming
months, taking it above $1.36.
Currency strategists say a November rate rise is now almost entirely
priced into sterling, so the pound is likely to rise only slightly on
Nov. 2 if the BoE acts as expected.
"Whether that's sustained or not depends on whether there's an
indication that there could be more steps to follow," said Ian Gunner,
portfolio manager at the Altana Hard Currency Fund in London.
WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO INFLATION?
The main aim of a rate rise is to curb inflation, which hit a
five-and-a-half year high of 3.0 percent in September.
The BoE research paper estimates a 1 percent rate rise would lower the
inflation rate by 1 percentage point after 3 years, so a quarter point
rise would only put on modest downward pressure.
[to top of second column] |
People walk past the
Bank of England in London, Britain, October 17, 2017. REUTERS/Hannah
McKay
The current inflation overshoot is due to a one-off hit from sterling's sharp
fall after last year's Brexit vote, which the BoE thinks will soon start to
fade.
Instead, a BoE rate rise now is insurance against its concern that the economy
cannot grow as fast it used to without generating excess inflation from an
overheating labor market.
Most economists are more doubtful that wages are set to grow strongly, even with
unemployment at a 42-year low.
There is also less conviction that a small rate rise has much effect on
inflation. NIESR's Kara said a 0.25 percentage point rate rise would probably
trim inflation by just 0.1 percentage points.
HOW MUCH MORE WILL MORTGAGES BORROWING COST?
The first impact many Britons will notice will be on their borrowing costs.
Interest payments on the average variable rate mortgage will rise by 180 pounds
($237) a year, according to Nationwide, one of Britain's biggest lenders.
But fewer Britons than in the past will be immediately affected. The proportion
of English households with mortgages has fallen below 30 percent from more than
40 percent a decade ago. And a record-low 40 percent of those mortgages are
variable rate, down from 70 percent in 2001, Nationwide said.
WHAT ABOUT CONSUMER BORROWING?
Consumer borrowing has grown rapidly for the past couple of years, but still
accounts for less than 10 percent of outstanding bank lending. The interest rate
on an average new personal loan is about 7.5 percent, so a quarter-point
increase will make little difference to interest payments.
That said, a minority of households do struggle with debt and this month credit
ratings agency Moody's said higher interest rates could hurt poorer households.
The BoE says debt trouble is closely linked to unemployment.
WILL A RATE RISE SURPRISE HOUSEHOLDS?
The BoE's message that a rate rise is probably coming has reached some but not
all households. A survey from financial data company IHS Markit this month
showed 40 percent of households expect rates to rise over the next three months,
up from 12 percent in September. Some 63 percent expect a rise in the next six
months, up from 29 percent before.
Nonetheless, some damage to consumer sentiment is possible. A gauge of consumer
sentiment from market research company GfK sentiment often showed a fall in
months when the BoE raised rates during its tightening cycle in the mid-2000s.
WILL HIGHER RATES HURT BUSINESS INVESTMENT?
Business investment has been fairly subdued, growing by 2.5 percent over the
past year. The cost of finance is not the reason, however. Uncertainty about
demand and a lack of profitable opportunities were the main grounds given in a
Confederation of British Industry survey.
For graphic on Bank of England doves and hawks, click: http://tmsnrt.rs/2uEU8my
For interactive graphic on comparison of UK and euro zone economy, click:
http://bit.ly/2lc6vUt
(Additional reporting by Jemima Kelly)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|