It is no surprise that the Bank of England have cut interest rates, but the Bank should have been bolder in its attempt to kick some life into the economy and actioned a double cut to 4%. Even with a major announcement this afternoon on UK / US trade tariffs to add to the India deal earlier this week we don’t see any changes in the overall downward trajectory.
|
<!–
–> |
The decision of the Monetary Policy Committee today to cut rates to 4.25% is another move in the ongoing battle for the Bank’s attention between inflation and growth— despite inflation consistently remaining above the Bank’s 2% target and expected to rise further, it is growth that is clearly their priority.
The Bank have recognised that rising inflation — driven largely by regulated price increases — is a short-term issue. The Bank of England has forecast in its Monetary Policy Report that inflation will reach 3.4% later this year, but it is expected to head back towards 2% by the end of the year.
Stagnating economic growth is not a short-term issue. A weak economic outlook, compounded by uncertainty surrounding global trade, is a long-term problem that requires intervention. With the Government relying on growth for the success of its fiscal strategy, the Chancellor will be relieved to see a cut in interest rates and the Bank’s prioritisation of growth.
That said, she may be looking longingly over the Channel as the ECB continues an aggressive rate-cutting strategy to support its struggling economies, with interest rates now at 2.25%. Reeves could certainly do with our own Central Bank being much bolder.
Get real time update about this post category directly on your device, subscribe now.
