Rates should be cut three more times in 2025, says Bank policymaker


A Bank of England policymaker has said interest rates should be cut three more times in 2025 as he cautioned the inflation outlook was at greater risk of being pushed โ€œoff trackโ€ amid global trade woes.

Alan Taylor, who is an external member of the Bankโ€™s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), said in a speech at the European Central Bank Forum (ECB) in Portugal that rates needed to come down at a faster pace, given the โ€œdeteriorating outlookโ€.

Mr Taylor was out-voted in calling for a quarter point cut in June, with the majority of the MPC deciding to keep rates on hold at 4.25%.

The Bank had reduced rates in May by a quarter point, down from 4.75%, but Mr Taylor had voted for a steeper half point cut.

In his speech on Wednesday, he said: โ€œPreviously, I had seen a UK soft landing in the cards, with some remaining upside risks to inflation from the bump in 2025.

โ€œNow I see that soft landing as being at risk, and greater probability of a downside scenario in 2026 pushing us off track, as demand weakness and trade disruptions build.โ€

He said that while energy prices โ€œremain a big unknownโ€, they are not the โ€œonly factor in playโ€.

He said the inflationary impact of the hike in national insurance contributions and price hikes should โ€œfade outโ€ in the new year, but that weakness in the economy is building.

On his June call for a back-to-back rate cut, he said: โ€œMy reading of the deteriorating outlook suggested to me that we needed to be on a lower rate path, needing five cuts in 2025 rather than the market-implied quarterly pace of four.โ€

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