BoE's Pill says size and duration of inflation spike bigger than
expected
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[October 07, 2021] LONDON
(Reuters) - The size and duration of a recent jump in inflation is
proving greater than expected but interest rates are likely to remain
relatively low in the coming years, new Bank of England Chief Economist
Huw Pill said.
"As the pandemic recedes and the level and composition of global demand
and supply normalise, these inflationary pressures should subside," Pill
said in answers to questions from lawmakers that were published on
Thursday.
"But the magnitude and duration of the transient inflation spike is
proving greater than expected."
His comments chimed with the BoE's September policy statement in which
it said Britain's consumer price inflation rate was likely to top 4% -
more than double the BoE's target - and the case for a first interest
rate hike since the coronavirus pandemic was strengthening.
Pill said the risks to the central bank's economic and inflation
forecasts were "again clearly becoming two-sided" after the economy
slumped by nearly 10% in 2020 due to the pandemic, but the BoE was
unlikely to hike rates sharply.
"I do expect interest rates to remain at relatively low levels for the
coming years, even as the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic recedes," he
said.
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A shopper leaves a Morrisons supermarket in Bradford, England,
January 9, 2003. REUTERS/Ian Hodgson/File Photo
The former Goldman Sachs economist also said negative interest rates - now part
of the BoE's arsenal - were "both feasible and likely to ease monetary
conditions" but they were no panacea and they could probably provide a limited
50 or 100 basis points of additional reduction in the Bank Rate.
Earlier on Thursday, a BoE survey showed British companies had raised their
inflation expectations.
Year-ahead annual price inflation was expected to be 3.5% in the three months to
September 2022, up from 3.2% in the August survey, the BoE said.
The survey of almost 2,900 businesses was conducted between Sept. 3 and Sept.
17, before a recent jump in energy prices and an escalation of a shortage of
supplies and staff which has prompted some private economists to say that
Britain's consumer price inflation rate will hit 5%.
(Reporting by William Schomberg and Alistair Smout)
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