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BoE report signals UK rates to rise

Mervyn King - Differing views in Bank of England
Mervyn King - Differing views in Bank of England

The Bank of England says UK inflation is just as likely to be above or below target in two years if interest rates rise as markets expect. Its report is seen as opening the door to a tighter monetary policy.

But BoE Governor Mervyn King insisted that no decision about when to raise rates had been taken.

'Some people are running ahead of themselves and saying that we are pre-announcing or laying the ground for a rate rise,' King told a news conference. 'That decision has not been taken and won't be taken until we get to the next meeting or the following meeting, or it may be many quarters.'

The bank's inflation report supported expectations the BoE will start hiking rates soon from a record low 0.5%, possibly as soon as May, given that inflation is double its 2% target and likely to climb further.

The bank's February report showed consumer price inflation spiking up to between 4% and 5% in the middle of this year before falling back to around 1.7% in early 2013, a higher forecast profile than in November. Rising price pressures have already prompted investors to bet on a series of UK rate hikes this year.

The bank said its forecasts were based on the assumption that interest rates would rise to 1% by the end of this year, hitting 2.1% at the end of 2012. 'Our judgement is that along that market path of interest rates the risks to inflation in the medium term are broadly balanced around the target,' King said. But he stressed that the central bank was not in the business of endorsing market expectations.

King admitted there were sharply differing views on the Monetary Policy Council of interest rate setters. 'There remains a wider than usual range of views among Committee members over the outlook for inflation,' he said.

Minutes to January's policy meeting showed two MPC members voted to raise rates that month, indicating a shift towards a more hawkish stance. The evidence from February's meeting will be published next week when the vote could have been even tighter.

The Monetary Policy Committee predicted a bumpy ride for the UK economy this year, with its 2011 forecasts for growth lower than those in its November quarterly forecasts, but it is seen picking up to around 3% in the medium term.

'Expansionary monetary policy, combined with further growth in global demand and the past deprecation of sterling should ensure that the recovery in the UK is maintained,' the BoE said. 'But the continuing fiscal consolidation and squeeze on households' purchasing power are likely to act as a brake,' it added.

That economic uncertainty led some economists to believe that markets are too hasty in pricing in a May rate rise with sharp government spending cuts only beginning to bite.