Most economists think the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee
will lower the bank's main interest rate by a quarter of a
percentage point to 4.50%, taking it to its lowest level since
mid-2023. The base rate helps dictate how expensive it is for
individuals to take out a mortgage or a loan, while also
influencing the returns offered by banks on savings.
Of particular interest to financial markets is what the bank's
accompanying economic forecasts show and the tone of Gov. Andrew
Bailey in his ensuing press briefing.
“Until now, the bank has cut at alternate meetings, but a
stagnating economy and declining employment argue for more
urgent action,” said Andrew Wishart, senior U.K. economist at
Berenberg Bank.
The rate-setting panel is tasked with ensuring that inflation,
as measured by the consumer prices index, hits a 2% target over
the coming couple years or so.
Though inflation is standing at 2.5% and expected to rise in
coming months, partly as a result of business tax increases from
the new Labour government, most economists think it will then
trend lower towards the target, hence the panel's ability to
cut.
Official figures earlier this month showed a surprise decline in
the inflation rate to 2.5% in the year to December, largely as a
result of easing price pressures in the services sector, which
accounts for around 80% of the U.K. economy.
Another potential reason for rate-setters to cut borrowing rates
is that economic growth in the U.K. has stagnated, which will
likely put downward pressure on inflation.
Inflation is way down from levels seen a couple of years ago,
partly because central banks dramatically increased borrowing
costs from near zero during the coronavirus pandemic. Prices
then started to shoot up, first as a result of supply chain
issues and later because of Russia’s full-scale invasion of
Ukraine, which pushed up energy costs.
As inflation rates have fallen from multidecade highs, central
banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve have started cutting
interest rates, though few, if any, economists think that rates
will fall back to the super-low levels that persisted in the
years after the global financial crisis of 2008-2009 and during
the pandemic.
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