Rising inflation and wage growth are likely to keep UK interest rates at 4.75%, according to experts. The Bank of England is expected to hold rates steady despite recent inflation increases and robust wage growth.
UK interest rates are expected to remain at 4.75%, with rising inflation and wage growth persuading the Bank of England’s policymakers to keep rate cuts on pause, experts think.The verdict will come a day after new official figures showed UK inflation increased in November for the second month in a row.The cost of train travel, petrol, and live entertainment were among those to increase last month, as well as everyday groceries such as butter and eggs.
Interest rates, which influence how much banks charge for loans and mortgages, are used as a tool by the central bank to keep inflation at its 2% target level. But Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation has risen above the target in recent months, rising to 2.3% in October and 2.6% in November. The Bank will also weigh up recent figures showing wage growth rose by more than expected in the three months to October, and separate figures showing the UK economy declined in October. Most economists think the latest data, and the prospect of price pressures increasing in the coming months, will persuade the Bank’s policymakers to hold interest rates at their current level of 4.75%. This would mark a continued pause on its rate-cutting cycle having reduced the level in August and again in November. Traders in the financial markets are expecting about a 10% chance of a rate cut, Investec Economics said on Wednesday.Rob Wood, chief UK economist for Pantheon Macroeconomics, said: “Inflation rising above the MPC’s (Monetary Policy Committee’s) target is one reason why we expect rate-setters to cut interest rates gradually.” He said policymakers would have to factor into their decision “stronger-than-expected inflation and wage growth, offsetting weaker GDP (gross domestic product) growth signals”. He added that services inflation – which tracks prices across industries including hospitality and culture, real estate, financial services and education – “remains too high” for overall inflation to return to targe
INTEREST RATES INFLATION UK ECONOMY BANK OF ENGLAND WAGE GROWTH
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