Bank of England raises UK interest rates to 4%
Hike of 0.5 percentage points lifts rates to 14-year
high, but BoE says shorter and shallower recession now more likely
Interest rates rise again but Bank of England hints at
a brighter future
Phillip
Inman
@phillipinman
Thu 2 Feb
2023 16.51 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/02/bank-of-england-raises-uk-interest-rates-to-4
The Bank of
England raised interest rates for a tenth consecutive time on Thursday from
3.5% to 4%, but said inflation may have peaked and a recession in the UK would
be shorter and shallower than previously feared.
Piling more
pressure on mortgage payers and businesses struggling to pay off their loans,
the Bank’s monetary policy committee (MPC) said the 0.5-percentage point rise
was needed after private sector wages had risen more than the central bank’s
previous forecasts.
Publishing
an updated outlook for the economy alongside the rate decision, the Bank said
that inflation “is likely to have peaked” and a recession would be less severe
than previously predicted, but said Brexit was damaging the economy more
quickly than it had anticipated.
“Brexit …
has been something that has pulled on our potential output in our country and
that’s been our assessment for many years,” said Ben Broadbent, a deputy
governor of the Bank.
“We’ve not
changed our estimate of the long-running effects, but we’ve brought some of
them forward and we think they’re probably coming in faster than we first
expected. Based on the numbers for trade and some degree for the numbers on
investment, we think these effects are coming through faster than initially
envisaged.”
Predicting
a shallower recession, the Bank said economic output would fall by 1% from peak
to trough, compared with the 3% drop it was expecting at the time of its
November outlook.
Bank staff
raised their forecast for the UK’s GDP growth rate in the final quarter of 2022
GDP to 0.1%, which would mean the UK narrowly avoided entering a technical
recession at the end of last year after the economy shrank in the third
quarter. Official figures for fourth-quarter growth will be published next
week.
However,
the economy is forecast to contract in each quarter of 2023 and the first
quarter of 2024 before staging a modest recovery.
The
governor, Andrew Bailey, said inflation had turned a corner after a dramatic
fall in gas prices on international markets, but there was a strong risk that
rising wages and a possible return of soaring gas costs later in the year would
push inflation higher again.
Adding that
the risk of a rebound in inflation was at the highest level in the MPC’s
25-year history, he said: “We need to be absolutely sure that we really are
turning the corner on inflation.”
The Bank
expects the headline rate of inflation to fall rapidly this year from
December’s 10.5% to 3.5% by the end of the year, and then 1% in 2024. The Bank
has an inflation target of 2%.
The shadow
chancellor, Rachel Reeves accused ministers of sitting on their hands while
families suffered higher inflation and higher interest rates. “Families across
the country will be worried about what rising interest rates today mean for
them,” she said.
The
Resolution Foundation thinktank said the bank’s analysis showed that the UK is
in the midst of the weakest 20-year period of growth since before the second
world war. “The UK is currently in the midst of a 20-year period in which
annual growth averages just 1% between 2006 and 2025 – the weakest 20-year
period of growth since 1919-1938,” it said.
Jeremy
Hunt’s tax rises, which are due to begin hitting household incomes from April,
will cut GDP growth by 0.4% next year, the Bank has calculated.
Responding
to the Bank’s latest rate rise, Hunt said lowering inflation was his top
priority because it was “the biggest threat to living standards in a
generation, so we support the Bank’s action today so we succeed in halving
inflation this year”.
He said the
government’s tax policies were in “in lockstep with the Bank’s approach,
including by resisting the urge right now to fund additional spending or tax
cuts through borrowing, which will only add fuel to the inflation fire and
prolong the pain for everyone.”
The
0.5-point increase was forecast by City analysts, who expect the Bank to raise
interest rates again to 4.5% in the spring before a series of cuts next year
brings the Bank rate back to 3.5%.
More than
1.5 million mortgage payers are expected to suffer an average £3,000-a-year
increase in interest payments when they refinance their loans this year, as
well as the hundreds of thousands of households that refinanced at higher rates
in 2022.
Monthly
bills for households in the rental sector have rocketed, a rise that landlords
are blaming on higher borrowing costs.
Two members
of the nine-member MPC voted to keep rates at 3.5%, arguing that the effects of
previous rates rises had yet to feed through into the wider economy.
Silvana
Tenreyro and Swati Dhingra, both seconded from the London School of Economics
to the MPC, have repeatedly warned that the central bank underestimates the
impact of previous interest rate rises and should pause to judge the effects on
mortgage holders, renters and small businesses before taking further action.
The MPC’s
majority view was that it would “continue to monitor closely indications of
persistent inflationary pressures, including the tightness of labour market
conditions and the behaviour of wage growth and services inflation”. In a
warning to workers, it said if there was evidence of “more persistent
pressures, then further tightening in monetary policy would be required”.
The MPC
said GDP would only reach its previous 2019 peak in 2026, indicating that a
combination of staff shortages fuelled by the Covid-19 pandemic and Brexit
combined with high energy prices had reduced the economy’s capacity to grow.
After the
turmoil in financial markets that followed Liz Truss’s mini-budget, investors
forecast interest rates peaking at 5.25%, but the highest they expected before
today’s meeting was 4.5%.
Private
sector wages increased by 7.2% in the three months to November, according to
official figures that showed the highest rises going to workers in the
financial services sector and business services, such as accountancy and the
legal industry. Most negotiated wage rises are about 4%, according to industry
surveys.
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