14/02/2002
Inflation rises but interest rates unchanged
The Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) have decided not to raise interest rates at its monthly meeting, despite inflation warnings from the Office for National Statistics (ONS).
The figures released by the ONS revealed an underlying inflation rate that exceeded the rates anticipated by the Bank of England. For the Bank of England to maintain its target interest base rate of four per cent, inflation was needed to remain fixed at 2.5 per cent. However, that mark was breached as the latest ONS figures showed a 2.6 per cent rate of inflation rate for January. This rise represents a steep upsurge from the December level of 1.9 per cent and it is believed to have derived from a hike in the price of vegetables and higher petrol prices.
Mervyn King of the Bank of England said: "Short-run movements in inflation are normal, monetary policy cannot easily affect them, and the MPC needs to look through them to form a judgment about the degree of inflationary pressures further ahead.
"With the central projection at the two-year horizon marginally below target, but rising, and with the risks on the upside, the MPC decided to keep interest rates unchanged when it met last week. The committee remains vigilant and will continue to set interest rates to keep prospective inflation on track to meet the target of 2.5 per cent."
And at the EEF biennial dinner, the Governor of the Bank of England, Eddie George, sounded a note of optimism on his hopes for the future and said he expected low inflation to continue.
"I am 'cautiously optimistic' that the overseas environment will improve as we move through the year, and that by this time next year we here in the UK will have seen a return to somewhat stronger and better balanced growth, with unemployment not far above its recent lows, and with continuing low inflation. If that is indeed how things turn out, we will have weathered the international storm as well as anyone could reasonably have expected," he said. (GMG)
The figures released by the ONS revealed an underlying inflation rate that exceeded the rates anticipated by the Bank of England. For the Bank of England to maintain its target interest base rate of four per cent, inflation was needed to remain fixed at 2.5 per cent. However, that mark was breached as the latest ONS figures showed a 2.6 per cent rate of inflation rate for January. This rise represents a steep upsurge from the December level of 1.9 per cent and it is believed to have derived from a hike in the price of vegetables and higher petrol prices.
Mervyn King of the Bank of England said: "Short-run movements in inflation are normal, monetary policy cannot easily affect them, and the MPC needs to look through them to form a judgment about the degree of inflationary pressures further ahead.
"With the central projection at the two-year horizon marginally below target, but rising, and with the risks on the upside, the MPC decided to keep interest rates unchanged when it met last week. The committee remains vigilant and will continue to set interest rates to keep prospective inflation on track to meet the target of 2.5 per cent."
And at the EEF biennial dinner, the Governor of the Bank of England, Eddie George, sounded a note of optimism on his hopes for the future and said he expected low inflation to continue.
"I am 'cautiously optimistic' that the overseas environment will improve as we move through the year, and that by this time next year we here in the UK will have seen a return to somewhat stronger and better balanced growth, with unemployment not far above its recent lows, and with continuing low inflation. If that is indeed how things turn out, we will have weathered the international storm as well as anyone could reasonably have expected," he said. (GMG)
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Interest rates rise to 4%
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Interest rates rise to 4%
Interest rates have been upped today a quarter percentage point to 4%, the Bank of England has announced. The bank's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), said that it based the decision in the light of the latest quarterly projections for output and inflation, to be published in the February Inflation Report.
30 August 2001
European Central Bank cuts interest rates
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European Central Bank cuts interest rates
The European Central Bank (ECB) has cut interest rates to 4.25 per cent. The news came on Thursday August 30, the day the Bank kicks off the countdown to the introduction of the euro as a cash currency in just four months time. A cut from the ECB’s 4.
19 March 2002
Fall in inflation suggests frozen interest rates
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Fall in inflation suggests frozen interest rates
New figures showing a fall in UK inflation have led to increased speculation that interest rates are unlikely to rise in the near future. The annual rate of inflation – excluding mortgage repayments – decreased to 2.2 per cent during February, a fall of 0.4 per cent on the figure for January. Inflation including mortgage repayments fell to 1.
08 August 2001
Economy slow down predicted by Bank of England
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Economy slow down predicted by Bank of England
According to the latest economic analysis from the Bank of England, the UK economy will remain weak for the rest of this year. The Bank’s quarterly inflation report indicated that although the economy was expected to begin to recover in 2002 the current pressures on the euro zone economic area were intense.
03 January 2002
House price growth to slow in 2002
The property market is set to experience a slip in demand during 2002 according to leading UK mortgage lender Nationwide and a twice-yearly survey by the CBI and property advisers GVA Grimley. The Nationwide review of 2001 revealed that UK house prices grew significantly during 2001 despite the global economic slowdown.
House price growth to slow in 2002
The property market is set to experience a slip in demand during 2002 according to leading UK mortgage lender Nationwide and a twice-yearly survey by the CBI and property advisers GVA Grimley. The Nationwide review of 2001 revealed that UK house prices grew significantly during 2001 despite the global economic slowdown.
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