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Friday May 10, 2024

Bank of England holds interest rate at 0.5pc

By AFP
December 15, 2017

London: The Bank of England kept its key interest rate at 0.5 percent at its final meeting of the year, it said Thursday while keeping an eye on Britain's Brexit-fuelled inflation.

The BoE sat tight at the meeting on Wednesday after lifting the rate in November for the first time in a decade, from a record-low 0.25 percent, faced with high inflation that could see the central bank lift borrowing costs further in 2018, according to analysts. Minutes from the BoE said that its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) had "voted unanimously to maintain Bank Rate at 0.50 percent".

"The committee also voted unanimously to maintain the stock of corporate bond purchases and UK government bond purchases" under the bank's cash stimulus programme that is pumping £445 billion ($597 billion, 505 billion euros) around the economy. Taking into account the bank´s outlook for UK inflation, "further modest increases in Bank Rate would be warranted over the next few years" but at "a gradual pace and to a limited extent".

British inflation has hit its highest level in almost six years, official data showed Tuesday. Price rises have accelerated across the UK during 2017 after Britain´s referendum vote in favour of leaving the European Union has pushed down on the pound, hiking the cost of imported goods.

"Business investment, while affected by uncertainties around Brexit, was projected to continue to grow at a modest pace, supported by strong global demand, high rates of profitability, the low cost of capital and limited spare capacity," said the BoE minutes.