BoE's Bailey: don't over-react to temporary jump in inflation
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[July 01, 2021] By
Andy Bruce and William Schomberg
LONDON (Reuters) -Bank of England Governor
Andrew Bailey said on Thursday it was important not to over-react to a
rise in inflation that was likely to prove temporary during Britain's
economic recovery from the COVID-19 crisis.
Echoing the message from the BoE's June policy meeting last week, Bailey
said the reasons the central bank thought inflation would not prove to
be persistent were "well-founded".
"It is important not to over-react to temporarily strong growth and
inflation, to ensure that the recovery is not undermined by a premature
tightening in monetary conditions," he said in an annual Mansion House
speech to leaders of the financial services industry.
Bailey added that the BoE would watch carefully for signs of more
persistent inflation pressure.
"And if we see those signs, we are prepared to respond with the tools of
monetary policy," he said.
Sterling fell folowing Bailey's warning against an over-reaction to
rising inflation.
British consumer price inflation jumped to 2.1% in May, surpassing the
BoE's 2% target level sooner than the central bank had forecast.
Last week, the central bank said inflation would surpass 3% as Britain's
locked-down economy reopens, but the climb further above its 2% target
would only be "temporary" and most policymakers favoured keeping
stimulus at full throttle.
Only Chief Economist Andy Haldane, at his last policy meeting before
leaving the BoE, voted to scale back the BoE's 895-billion-pound ($1.2
trillion) bond-buying programme.
He warned last month that BoE faced its "most dangerous moment for
monetary policy" since the European Exchange Rate Mechanism debacle in
1992.
A week earlier, the U.S. Federal Reserve began to move towards reducing
its pandemic stimulus by signalling its first rate hike in 2023, a year
earlier than previous projections.
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Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey poses for a photograph on the
first day of his new role at the Central Bank in London, Britain
March 16, 2020. Tolga Akmen/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
RETURN OF FURLOUGHED STAFF
In his speech, Bailey said there were at least three reasons why the increase in
inflation would probably be temporary.
They included distortions caused by comparing prices now with those of a year
ago during the first lockdown; shortages of supplies caused by a rush of pent-up
demand and pandemic-linked bottlenecks; and a return to spending on services
which would smooth out demand that has been concentrated on goods.
As well as inflation, the BoE is concerned about a possible rise in
unemployment.
The government began requiring employers to start contributing to the cost of
keeping on furloughed workers from Thursday and was due to end the scheme at the
end of September.
Bailey said in his speech on Thursday that a spike in average earnings was in
large part due to heavy job losses in low-paying sectors such as hospitality
which had been hardest hit by the pandemic.
"That is not where we should place most of our focus on the labour market," he
said. "Our focus should be on whether, and how rapidly, people return to the
labour force, and in what degree."
The BoE must also factor in risks from a new rise in COVID-19 cases, which has
prompted the government to delay the lifting of the last social-distancing rules
until July 19.
($1 = 0.7261 pounds)
(Reporting by Andy BruceEditing by William Schomberg and Pravin Char)
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