BoE remains divided on bank rate rises

Minutes of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee Meeting held on 7 and 8 October have been released today, in which the committee concluded that the base rate should be maintained at 0.5%


Related topics:

Wednesday 22nd October 2014

bank money building

Deprecated: trim(): Passing null to parameter #1 ($string) of type string is deprecated in C:\inetpub\wwwroot\2025.financialreporter.co.uk\htdocs\templates\front-end\partials\article_blockquote.php on line 2

However, despite the likelihood of the MPC voting for an interest rate rise early next year receding, the meeting revealed that a rise could be getting closer.

Regarding Bank Rate, seven members of the Committee  voted in favour of the proposition, but Ian McCafferty and Martin Weale voted against the proposition, preferring to increase Bank Rate by 25 basis points.

For McCafferty and Weale, economic circumstances were sufficient to justify an immediate rise in Bank Rate, stating that keeping the Bank Rate at its current level for too long risked unbalancing the recovery.

In the meeting, they argued that inflation was 'well below the target, partly the effect of the higher exchange rate and lower raw materials prices.'

In the judgement of these members, even after a rise of 25 basis points in Bank Rate, monetary policy would remain extremely supportive, and an early rise would facilitate the Committee’s aspiration that any subsequent rises in Bank Rate should be only gradual. The remaining committee members warned that 'premature tightening in monetary policy might leave the economy vulnerable to shocks.'

Author:
Rozi Jones Editor Editor
Do you have a story for Financial Reporter?
Get in touch

Comments:


Breaking news
Direct to your inbox:

More
stories
you'll love:

Latest from:

Property Reporter


Protection Reporter


Modern Lender