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Bank of England's Clare Lombardelli supports 'gradual' interest rate cuts

Clare Lombardelli, a rate-setter at the Bank of England, struck a cautious note as she laid out her views on the inflationary dynamics in the economy

A view of the Bank of England (Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

Clare Lombardelli, a rate-setter at the Bank of England, has expressed caution regarding the inflationary dynamics in the economy. In her inaugural speech as one of the Bank’s deputy governors, she advocated for a "gradual removal" of monetary policy restriction.

"I view the probabilities of downside and upside risks to inflation as broadly balanced. But at this point I am more worried about the possible consequences if the upside materialised, as this could require a more costly monetary policy response," she stated at the Bank of England’s watchers conference, as reported by .

She suggested that the outlook for wages and services prices, both key indicators of underlying inflationary pressure, was "unclear".

Recent official figures revealed that inflation rose back up to 2.3 per cent in October, with services inflation increasing to 5.0 per cent. Regular wage growth currently stands at 4.8 per cent, still comfortably ahead of target-consistent levels.

"We need to see more evidence that wage growth and services inflation will continue their journey down to target-consistent rates," she said, noting some indications that the "process of wage disinflation may be slowing". It’s too early to declare victory on inflation.

It’s often been said that the last mile may be the hardest, and that’s where we are now.

Bank of England Deputy Governor for Monetary Policy Clare Lombardelli (Image: Henry Nicholls/PA Wire)

In addition to her role as a rate-setter, Lombardelli has also taken on the task of responding to the Bernanke review, published last year. The review highlighted "material under-investment" in core infrastructure, indicating that much of the key software was outdated.

The former Fed chair also advised the Bank to utilise different scenarios more when outlining the probable trajectory for interest rates. Lombardelli admitted that the review made for "uncomfortable reading", implying that "the whole nose to tail process of monetary policy making and communication" will eventually need reforming.