The
Bank of England (BoE) announced its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) voted 9-0
to keep the Bank Rate at 0.1 percent at its August meeting, as widely expected.
The
MPC also voted unanimously to maintain the stock of sterling non-financial
investment-grade corporate bond purchases at GBP20 billion and voted by a
majority of 7-1 to continue with the existing programme of UK government bond
purchases at GBP875 billion, thus maintaining the total target stock of asset
purchases at GBP895 billion.
In
its policy report, the BoE notes:
- UK
GDP is expected to have risen by 5% in Q2, leaving it around 4% below its
pre-pandemic level and slightly stronger than expected in May;
- GDP
is seen to grow by around 3% in Q3, somewhat weaker than expected in May due to
small negative impact from recent developments in the pandemic;
- UK
GDP is projected to recover further over the remainder of the year, reaching
its pre-pandemic level in Q4;
- Further
out, pace of GDP growth is expected to slow towards more normal rates, partly
reflecting gradual tightening in stance of announced fiscal policy;
- Frictions
in UK’s labour market are judged likely to dissipate over forecast period,
boosting growth in effective supply capacity. There is uncertainty around these
judgements, including how economy will adjust to the end of furlough scheme;
- CPI
inflation is projected to rise temporarily in near term, to 4% in Q4, owing
largely to developments in energy and other goods prices, before falling back
to close to the 2% target;
- MPC’s
central expectation is that current elevated global and domestic cost pressures
will prove transitory. Nonetheless, economy is projected to experience more
pronounced period of above-target inflation in near term than expected in May;
- MPC
has had policy guidance in place specifying that it does not intend to tighten
monetary policy at least until there is clear evidence that significant
progress is being made in eliminating spare capacity and achieving 2%-inflation
target sustainably. Some members judge that, although considerable progress has
been made in achieving the conditions of that guidance, conditions are not yet
met fully. Other members judge that conditions of the guidance have been met
fully, but note that guidance made clear that these have only ever been necessary
not sufficient conditions for any future tightening in monetary policy;
- All
members confirm that in judging appropriate stance of monetary policy, MPC
will, as always, focus on medium-term prospects for inflation rather than
factors that are likely to be transient;
- MPC will
be monitoring closely incoming evidence regarding developments in labour
market, and particularly unemployment, wider measures of slack and underlying
wage pressures;
- MPC judges
that, should economy evolve broadly in line with central projections in the
August Monetary Policy Report, some modest tightening of monetary policy over forecast
period is likely to be necessary to be consistent with meeting inflation target
sustainably in medium term;
- There
is uncertainty about impact of reducing stock of purchased assets on monetary
conditions, but MPC judges that, when conducted in a gradual and predictable
manner and when markets are functioning normally, it is likely to be smaller
than that of asset purchases;
- MPC
intends to begin to reduce stock of purchased assets when Bank Rate has reached
0.5%, if appropriate given economic circumstances
- MPC
judges that the reduction in stock of purchased assets should initially occur
through ceasing reinvestment of maturing assets, to allow reduction to occur at
gradual and predictable pace