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Bank of England's Bailey says interest rates gradually heading downwards

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said he was 'very encouraged' by the downward path of UK inflation
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said he was 'very encouraged' by the downward path of UK inflation

The Bank of England should be able to lower interest rates gradually as it gains confidence that inflation will remain close to its 2% target, Governor Andrew Bailey said in an interview published today.

Andrew Bailey said he was "very encouraged" by the downward path of inflation since it peaked at 11.1% nearly two years ago.

"I do think the path for interest rates will be downwards, gradually," he told the Kent Messenger newspaper.

"Inflation has come down a long way," Bailey added. "We still have to get it sustainably at the target and we have quite an unbalanced mix of components of inflation at the moment."

British inflation was 2.2% in August but the Bank of England remains concerned about high rates of growth in services prices and regular wages, both of which are rising at an annual pace of more than 5%.

Asked where interest rates would settle, Bailey said he did not expect them to return to the historic lows close to zero last seen four years ago, and his best guess was that it would settle at a neutral rate which he was unable to specify.

Last week the Bank of England kept its main interest rate unchanged at 5% after cutting it from a 16-year high of 5.25% in August.

Economists polled by Reuters expect the Bank of England to cut rates to 4.75% at its next meeting in November.

Last week Bailey said he was optimistic rates would fall further, but also said cuts would need to be gradual and the Bank of England needed "to be careful not to cut too fast or by too much".

Bailey spoke to the Kent Messenger during a visit to southeast England, including the port of Dover, the main route for freight and much passenger travel between Britain and continental Europe.

Asked about the economic impact of Brexit, Bailey said: "What we have seen, there will be some short-term painful effect on trade. But over a longer period of time that trade will be redirected."