Higher interest rates will strengthen household spending, Bank policymaker says


Interest rates need to stay higher for longer to bring UK inflation down to its 2% target and therefore strengthen consumer spending, a Bank of England policymaker has said.

Catherine Mann said it may seem โ€œcounterintuitiveโ€ to keep borrowing costs higher in order to boost growth, but it is necessary in light of persistent inflation.

Ms Mann, who is an external member of the Bankโ€™s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), was discussing concerns about weak consumption among UK households which was weighing on overall economic growth.

She said in a speech at a Resolution Foundation event: โ€œIf the consumption gap was my only concern, reducing the restrictiveness of monetary policy would be appropriate.

โ€œHowever, in light of elevated inflation and expectations, maintaining restrictiveness for longer would be appropriate.โ€

Restrictive monetary policy refers to interest rates being kept at higher levels.

UK rates were held at 4% at the Bankโ€™s last meeting in September, with Governor Andrew Bailey saying the UK was โ€œnot out of the woodsโ€ on inflation.

The UKโ€™s overall inflation rate is nearly twice the Bank of Englandโ€™s target level, at 3.8% in August, according to the latest official figures.

Food and drink price rises have accelerated for five months in a row.

UK prices are now 30% higher than they were before the 2021-2022 inflation surge, Ms Mann pointed out.

โ€œThis means that UK households have experienced 12 years of inflation in a little over two years.โ€

โ€œIt is perhaps counterintuitive that in order to create an environment conducive to growth, monetary policy must remain restrictive for longer,โ€ she said.

โ€œBut this is necessary to bring inflation sustainably back to our 2% target in the medium term.โ€

The economist said this would mean households can return to normal consumption and saving behaviour, and be able to spend money without paying attention to inflation.

This, in turn, would help strengthen consumer demand.

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