Did everyone here already know that Britain targets 2.5% inflation (see Bloomberg article below)? And when it falls below that level, they lower interest rates? And: <<Although consumer and business confidence is beginning to recover the bank said further cuts would be needed if the currency didn't weaken, to prevent inflation from falling below target. The government requires the bank to issue a public explanation if inflation varies by more than one percentage point either side of the target.>> Their benchmark rate is 2.5% above their targetted inflation rate, and they are lowering rates. The US benchmark is more than 3% above our inflation rate, and we are talking about raising rates. Real rates are high; just keeping them steady is tight enough. Of course, keeping them steady means consistency, and that consistency is probably as much responsible for growth as anything else, as it makes forecasting and planning easier and more accurate. So, if that is correct and if the Fed really wants to slow growth, they should just be unpredictable to accomplish their purpose.
Bank of England Unexpectedly Cuts Benchmark Rate by Quarter Point to 5.00% By Irena Guzelova
Bank of England Cuts Benchmark Rate a Quarter Point (Update1) (Adds central bank statement from 1st paragraph.)
London, June 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England cut its benchmark interest rate by a surprise quarter percentage point to 5.0 percent after the pound's rise against the euro threatened to drive inflation below the government's 2.5 percent annual target.
The cut was forecast by only four out of 17 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, even though the pound's 8.0 percent rise against the euro since January has helped reduce import prices to a thirty-year low and has prevented U.K. businesses from raising prices at home. The pound has also kept manufacturing industry in a year-long recession and cut farm incomes to their lowest level since the 1930s. ''The committee judged that it is now more likely that inflation will undershoot the 2.5 percent target,'' said the bank in a statement after the announcement, which prompted a rise in U.K. bond prices as financial stocks trimmed earlier losses.
Inflation in April was 2.4 percent, below the target. And companies say the currency's rise will push inflation further below target by year's end as competition keeps consumer price pressures at bay. ''Our markets are becoming increasingly competitive,'' said Ian Prosser, chairman of Bass Plc., a producer and distributor of beer and soft drinks. ''The low inflationary environment is restricting price increases.''
Last month, the bank said further cuts would depend on the level of the pound. Although consumer and business confidence is beginning to recover the bank said further cuts would be needed if the currency didn't weaken, to prevent inflation from falling below target. The government requires the bank to issue a public explanation if inflation varies by more than one percentage point either side of the target.
Since the central bank issued that statement, however, the pound has strengthened a further 1.5 percent against the euro, and 1.2 percent against a basket of currencies of Britain's main trading partners. On a trade-weighted basis, the pound has risen nearly 26 percent since August 1996, when its ascent began.
Today's move comes as voters go to the polls to election U.K. members of the European Parliament. It is unusual for a central bank to change monetary policy on an election day. The action follows reports this week which showed a fall in May retail sales, and manufacturers still in recession. It cuts the U.K. benchmark securities repurchase rate to its lowest level since October 1977 and follows a series of reductions begun last October that brought the rate down from a 7.5 percent peak.
The pound's strength has driven manufacturing industry, or 25 percent of the overall economy, into a recession from which it is only just emerging. Farmers, accounting for a further 5 percent, have fared even worse. ''While a recovery seems to be on track, sterling is throwing a spanner in the works,'' said John Shepperd, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort Benson. ''Continued strength may require further cuts.''
Latest figures show inflation is already falling below target. A poll of 28 economists taken by the U.K. treasury show they expect inflation to average 2.3 percent during 1999, and to decline further by year's end.
Even as economic growth shows some signs of life after grinding to a halt in the first quarter, economists and the Bank of England don't expect it to reach the long-term annual average of between 2.25 percent and 2.5 percent. Economists surveyed by the treasury expect economic growth to average 0.9 percent this year and the bank predicts growth of about 1 percent. ''Manufacturers and exporters still remain in severe difficulty and are facing pressures from the strength of sterling,'' said Iain McMillan, director of the Confederation of British Industry in Scotland. ''Though there is more encouraging news in some of the service sector, there is quite clearly no sign of inflationary pressures.''
More Rate Cuts
Although the bank expects the pound to decline, sterling's continued strength is likely to lead to at least one further rate cut, say economists. ''If sterling remains strong, we judge that there could be an additional rate cut by year-end,'' said Michael Dicks, chief European economist at Lehman Brothers.
Even so, today's decision was probably a close call. A series of surveys indicate cheaper borrowing costs are encouraging consumers and businesses to spend again. Cheaper borrowing costs have left the average homeowner just over 150 pounds ($250) better off per month. Last week the Bank of England said credit card borrowing in April rose to its highest level since records began six and a half years ago.
Halifax Plc, the U.K.'s major mortgage lender, reported a 2.1 percent rise in house prices in May from April, the sharpest rise in six years. And the Confederation of British Industry's monthly survey of stores and supermarkets showed that retailers expect sales to rebound in June at their strongest annual rate since May, 1998. ''There is a general feeling that the economic environment is improving, so we are confident about the second half of the year,'' said Ian Prosser of Bass.
Minutes of last month's meeting show the Bank of England's nine-member rate-setting panel was split five to four in favor of leaving rates unchanged. The dissenting members all favored a quarter-point reduction. The bank will release the minutes of today's meeting on June 23. |