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Economic Development

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey on inflation, interest rates and recession

Andrew Bailey has been on an official visit to South Wales

Governor of the BoE Andrew Bailey(Image: PA Media )

The rate of inflation remains on track to fall rapidly from the spring although there remains a risk of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s tight labour market creating more inflationary pressures forcing the bank to intervene by rising interest rates, the Governor of the Bank of England has said.

On an official visit to South Wales, his last before the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee makes its February decision on the base rate (currently 3.5%), Andrew Bailey said the central bank still believes the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy will enter into a recession which, although shallow, will be contracted.

He was not able to comment on where the bank sees interest rates peaking - with rate rises being its key weapon in reducing inflation and getting it back to its 2% target. But he noted that since taking the unusual step last November to comment that the market view on interest rates getting to a peak of 6% was too high, the bank hasn’t since made a similar intervention. The current market thinking on interest rates is that they could peak at around 4.5%.

In its Monetary Policy Report last November, the BoE expected inflation to fall to 5.2% in the Q4 of 2023 before dipping below its target of 2% in early 2024. Mr Bailey said that remains unchanged.

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Speaking at the manufacturing base of family-owned bakery firm Brace’s in Blackwood, Mr Bailey said the fall in the rate of inflation to 10.5% this month, following on from another slight decline in December was expected and was “the beginning of a sign that a corner has been turned.”

On the outlook for inflation said: “What we think is the most likely outcome is that it will fall quite rapidly this year, probably starting in the late spring and that has a lot to do with energy pricing.

“There was a sort of locked in level of energy prices over the winter, but we expect it to fall quite rapidly after that, for at least for a couple of reasons. One, it is a bit of arithmetic in the sense as it is of course an annual calculation so the big base effects from last year will start to fall out, And unless something happens, it will start to fall quite rapidly actually as we showed in our November monetary policy report.