The Bank of England left policy unchanged today, sticking to its commitment to keep interest rates at record lows until the country's recovery is more firmly established.
The bank has kept rates at a record-low 0.5% since March 2009 to shore up an economy battered by the financial crisis and a heavy overhang of debt.
Britain has enjoyed a surprisingly strong recovery since the start of the year, overtaking its euro zone peers to become one of the fastest growing G7 economies.
But Mark Carney, the Canadian who took the helm of the bank in July, has made clear that he does not want to jeopardise growth by tightening policy too early.
In August, the Bank of England said it would not think about raising rates until Britain's unemployment rate falls to 7%, something it predicted would not happen until well into 2016.
Given the speed of Britain's recent recovery, many investors are betting unemployment will fall much more quickly and they expect the Bank of England to tweak its projections when it publishes new forecasts next week.
As the economy has picked up speed, calls for more stimulus from a minority of the BoE's policymakers have faded away.
The Bank's Monetary Policy Committee opted today to leave its bond-buying programme unchanged at £375 billion sterling, as expected by all the economists who took part in a Reuters poll.
Inflation in Britain is running above the central bank's 2% target - in contrast to the euro zone where price growth has slowed to just 0.7%. Some of the more hawkish Bank of England policymakers may be concerned about a recent jump in inflation expectations in Britain.
That drop in euro zone inflation saw the ECB cutting rates to 0.25% today - a new record low.