Bank of England raises interest rates to 1.25%
Bank warns of inflation rising to 11% after split vote
to lift rate, for fifth time in a row, by 0.25 points
Richard
Partington Economics correspondent
@RJPartington
Thu 16 Jun
2022 12.37 BST
The Bank of
England has raised interest rates for a fifth time in succession to tackle an
inflation rate that is heading towards 11% amid soaring household energy bills.
In a move
widely expected by City economists, the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC)
voted by a majority to increase its key base rate by 0.25 percentage points to
1.25% in response to living costs rising at the fastest annual rate for four
decades.
It also
said it was ready to “act forcefully” if required, signalling further rate
rises in the coming months.
In a
downbeat assessment as the central bank attempts to navigate a narrow path
between flatlining economic growth and surging inflation, Threadneedle Street
now expects the economy to shrink in the second quarter while a further rise in
household energy bills is expected to push inflation above 11% in October.
In a split
decision, a minority of three members of the nine-strong MPC pushed for a
larger, 0.5-point rise, amid growing unease over persistently high inflation as
central banks around the world launch aggressive rate hikes to combat the
rising cost of living.
Stock
markets tumbled on Thursday as investors feared that rising interest rates
would curb growth and lead to recession. The FTSE 100 blue-chip index slumped
3.14% to a three-month low, and suffered its worst day since early March.
European
shares also slid, and bonds prices weakened, after a surprise interest rate
rise by Switzerland’s central bank, while on Wall Street the S&P 500 had
fallen around 3% in early trading.
Reflecting
fears about the rising cost of living as the Covid pandemic and Russia’s war in
Ukraine drive up global energy prices, the MPC said it was ready to launch a
tougher response to inflation remaining above its target rate of 2%.
“The
committee would be particularly alert to indications of more persistent
inflationary pressures, and would, if necessary, act forcefully in response,”
it said.
The
committee made its decision on Wednesday afternoon, before the Fed announced
its 0.75-point move, although global financial markets had already shifted by
that time to anticipate a sharp rate rise from the American central bank. The
Fed had previously guided Wall Street to expect a 0.5 point rise.
Nevertheless,
the Bank of England’s decision to stick with a 0.25-point increase underscores
concern over the strength of the UK economy after weaker growth readings in
recent months, as the cost of living crisis erodes household spending power and
businesses struggle with severe staff shortages and supply chain bottlenecks.
Highlighting
the growing risk of a recession, the Bank sharply downgraded its growth
forecast for the second quarter of the year, cutting its estimate from a 0.1%
rise in GDP during the three months to the end of June to a 0.3% decline.
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Official
figures showed that the economy unexpectedly shrank in April after a fall in
March. Threadneedle Street said other “temporary factors”, including the
Queen’s platinum jubilee bank holiday, were also likely to have weighed on
growth.
British
households have faced a surge in living costs this year, with inflation
reaching 9% in April – the highest rate in the G7 group of wealthy nations –
after a record increase in gas and electricity bills.
The Bank
said Rishi Sunak’s £15bn cost of living support package for households
struggling with their bills would probably boost the economy by about 0.3%,
although it would also add 0.1 percentage points to inflation within the first
year as it would help support strong consumer demand for goods and services.
Andrew
Bailey, the Bank’s governor, said further increases in household energy bills
expected this October would lead inflation to rise slightly above 11% in
October. In a letter to the chancellor explaining the Bank’s response to
inflation, he said a “succession of global shocks” were hitting the British
economy.
“The MPC
will take the actions necessary to return inflation to the 2% target
sustainably in the medium term,” Bailey said.

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