It is no surprise that the Bank of England have cut interest rates, but the Bank should have been bolder inย its attemptย to kick some life intoย 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 donโt see any changes in the overall downward trajectory.
Theย decision of the Monetary Policy Committee today to cut rates to 4.25% is another move in the ongoing battleย for the Bankโs attentionย between inflation and growthโ despite inflation consistently remaining above the Bankโs 2% target and expected to rise further, it is growth that is clearly their priority.
The Bank have recognised that rising inflation โ driven largely by regulated price increases โ is a short-term issue. ย 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.
Stagnatingย economicย 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 beย relievedย to see a cutย in interest ratesย and the Bankโs prioritisation of growth.
That said,ย 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%.ย Reevesย could certainly do with our own Central Bank being much bolder.
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