With outlook uncertain, the Bank of England joins the US Fed in putting
interest rates on hold
[March 21, 2025] By
PAN PYLAS
LONDON (AP) — The Bank of England kept its main U.K. interest rate
unchanged at 4.50% on Thursday even though the economy is barely growing
and the nation faces more uncertainty in light of the tariff policies
being enacted by the Trump administration in the U.S.
The decision by the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee was widely
expected, and comes a day after the U.S. Federal Reserve also kept
interest rates unchanged.
Minutes from the meeting showed that eight members voted to keep policy
unchanged, with one backing a quarter-point reduction.
The rate-setting panel has reduced the Bank of England’s main rate from
a 16-year high of 5.25% by a quarter of a percentage on three occasions
since last August, most recently in February, after inflation fell from
the multi-decade highs of over 10% reached in the wake of the sharp
spike in energy prices following Russia's full-blown invasion of Ukraine
in early 2022 .
However, inflation, at 3%, remains above the bank’s 2% target and is set
to push higher in coming months, even without accounting for any tariffs
imposed by the Trump administration. Many economists think it could rise
as high as 4% in the coming months as businesses are raise prices as a
result of a big increase in the minimum wage and higher payroll taxes.
“There’s a lot of economic uncertainty at the moment," said Bank Gov.
Andrew Bailey. “We still think that interest rates are on a gradually
declining path, but we’ve held them at 4.5% today.”

If policymakers continue to pursue their recent gradual approach, then
another cut is likely in May, when they will be armed with the bank’s
latest economic projections and Bank Gov. Andrew Bailey next holds a
press conference.
Bailey said rate-setters will be “looking very closely at how the global
and domestic economies are evolving” and that whatever happens, "it’s
our job to make sure that inflation stays low and stable.”
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General view of the Bank of England, in London, Monday, May 2, 2022.
(AP Photo/Alberto Pezzali, File)
 The U.S. Federal Reserve, which kept
borrowing rates unchanged Wednesday, also expressed uncertainty
about the near-term economic outlook, particularly in light of U.S.
President Donald Trump’s tariff policies, which economists worry
would lower global growth and lead to an uptick in prices.
The British economy, the sixth-largest, eked out modest growth of
0.1% in the fourth quarter, a hugely disappointing outcome for the
new Labour government, which has made boosting growth its number one
economic policy. Since the global financial crisis in 2008-2009, the
British economy’s growth performance has been notably below its
long-run average.
Critics say Treasury chief Rachel Reeves is partly responsible for
the gloomy economic news since Labour returned to power in July
after 14 years, because she was overly downbeat when taking on her
role and has since increased taxes, particularly on businesses.
Reeves, who on March 26 will deliver a keenly-watched statement on
the state of the public finances to lawmakers, will be hoping that
the Bank of England does cut borrowing rates further over coming
months as it will likely help shore up growth.
Economists said the latest update from the bank did little to clear
up the outlook, though most said a further quarter-point reduction
in May remained on the cards.
“But beyond that, much will depend on trade policy out of the U.S.
and the fiscal announcements coming from the Chancellor,” said Luke
Bartholomew, deputy chief economist at asset management firm
Aberdeen.
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