The Bank of England says it expects inflation to surge above 3%, but keeps its $1.25 trillion bond-buying target for now
- The Bank of England said it now expects inflation to surge above 3% as the economy recovers.
- Yet it kept its bond-buying target unchanged at $1.25 trillion and interest rates at record lows.
- UK inflation jumped to 2.1% year on year in May, above the central bank's 2% target.
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The Bank of England said on Thursday that it now expects UK inflation to surge above 3% as the economy reopens from lockdown. But it nonetheless maintained its bond-buying target at $1.25 trillion, saying sharp price rises should be temporary.
Departing chief economist Andy Haldane was the only one of nine monetary policy committee (MPC) members to vote against the plans. Raising concerns that strong inflation may stick around, he voted to cut the bond-buying package by 50 billion pounds ($70 billion).
The Bank also decided to keep its main interest rate at the record-low level of 0.1%, in a unanimous vote, on top of the 8-1 decision to keep the bond-buying package steady at 895 billion pounds ($1.25 trillion).
The pound fell after the announcement, and was around 0.44% lower against the dollar at $1.389.
UK inflation jumped 2.1% in May year-on-year, the biggest rise since July 2019 and above the Bank of England 2% target. It was a bigger rise than the central bank had expected.
The Bank said on Thursday that it now expects inflation to jump above 3% for a temporary period, "owing primarily to developments in energy and other commodity prices." In May, it had only expected inflation to rise temporarily above 2%.
Yet the Bank's MPC said it expects inflation to fall back again as commodities price rises fade. However, it said there are "risks around this central path, and it is possible that near-term upward pressure on prices could prove somewhat larger than expected."
Central banks in advanced economies are dealing with the strongest inflation in years, as growth rebounds sharply after the COVID-19 slump. Too much inflation is seen as disruptive for economies, and major central banks try to keep it at around 2%.
In the US - where year-on-year inflation hit 5% in May - the Federal Reserve has signaled a slight shift in its expectations for monetary policy. Officials now predict the central bank will raise rates in 2023, according to "dot plot" estimates released last week.
But Paul Dales, chief UK economist at consultancy Capital Economics, said: "Other than the [Bank of England's] MPC noting the growing upside risks to inflation at today's policy meeting, there were no real signs that it is thinking about tightening policy sooner, à la the Fed.
"We think policy will be tightened much later than the mid-2022 date the markets have assumed."
from Business Insider https://ift.tt/3wXelBM
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