Bank of England rate-setter says risks to UK inflation justify slower cuts

Risks to the UKโs inflation outlook may have increased, justifying the need to take a cautious approach to cutting interest rates, a Bank of England policymaker has said.
Megan Greene, a member of the Bankโs rate-setting committee, said the current uncertainties and risks facing the economy meant it may be better to โskipโ rate cuts rather than lower them quickly.
Speaking at Adam Smith Business School at the University of Glasgow, Ms Greene said โsupply shocksโ to the economy were likely to become more frequent.
This refers to events such as the Covid pandemic and the war in Ukraine that impact production and therefore can send prices higher.
She said the lessons learned from recent supply shocks โsuggest that the risks to our inflation outlook have shifted to the upsideโ.
This was partly because of weak productivity growth in the UK as well as the rising unemployment rate, which both put pressure on overall inflation.
Ms Greene said it was clear that a โyear-long tick up in inflation puts the UK in stark contrast with our developed economy peersโ.
She also pointed to climate change and higher tariffs as factors that could generate supply shocks in the future.
However, the policymaker said the risks from global trade tensions had โabated somewhatโ due to a โflurry of trade agreementsโ between the US and other countries helping to reduce uncertainty.
Ms Greene stressed that she was โnot in favour of policy reversals by central banksโ โ referring to sharp interest rate cuts โ and that could mean โskipping cutsโ was a better approach.
โInstead, I believe an appropriate response to the uncertainty and risks we are currently facing should involve a cautious approach to rate cuts going forward,โ she concluded.