Bank of England policymaker calls for interest rates to stay on hold for longer


A Bank of England policymaker has called for UK interest rates to stay on hold for longer in order to keep rising inflation at bay.

Catherine Mann, a member of the Bankโ€™s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), said keeping rates at the current level was โ€œappropriate right nowโ€.

โ€œA more persistent hold on bank rate is appropriate right now, to maintain the tight (but not tighter) monetary policy stance needed to lean against inflation persistence persisting,โ€ she wrote in a speech due to be delivered in Mexico on Tuesday.

โ€œHowever, I stand ready for a forceful policy action, in the form of larger, more rapid bank rate cuts, should the downside risks to domestic demand start materialising.โ€

Interest rates were cut to 4% earlier this month.

But for the first time in the MPCโ€™s history, rate-setters had to vote twice after failing to reach a majority the first time.

Governor Andrew Bailey said it had been a โ€œfinely balanced decisionโ€ and stressed that โ€œany future rate cuts will need to be made gradually and carefullyโ€.

Ms Mann was among the members of the nine-person committee who preferred to keep rates on hold at 4.25% at the last meeting.

She is set to say in her speech, held at the Future of Central Banking conference, that the risk of increased inflation persistence is currently โ€œplaying outโ€.

โ€œThe projected inflation hump is higher than in our forecast in May,โ€ she said, adding that food prices were โ€œelevatedโ€.

UK Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation has been rising in recent months, with food price inflation climbing to the highest level in more than a year.

The Bank of England is now expecting CPI to peak at 4% in September, having previously estimated that it would peak at 3.5%.

Ms Mann added that โ€œby squeezing out inflation today, you prevent it from persisting in the futureโ€, adding that โ€œif this policy is not followed, even tighter policy would be required laterโ€ to rein in inflation.

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