The Bank of England has today raised interest rates for the third time in as many meetings, in a bid to tackle rising inflation. Here Dr Tony Syme, and Dr Maria Rana, macroeconomic experts from the 海角乱伦 Business School assess the decision.
Dr Syme said: 鈥淎s the Bank of England say, 鈥渉igher interest rates makes borrowing more expensive and it encourages saving. That reduces how much people spend overall. And this will help to keep inflation down鈥. But the decline in real wages and increasing pressure on household budgets is already reducing how much people spend anyway.
鈥淭he issues in the labour market should be the focus of government policy. For the Bank of England, they should take their lead from A.A. Milne: 鈥渄oing nothing often leads to the very best of something.
鈥淭here are clear signals that there will be several more interest rate rises this year. The policy is designed to limit inflation which reached a 30-year high in January at 5.5%.
鈥淏ut there is an inherent flaw within this policy. As the Bank of England say themselves, 鈥渉igher interest rates don鈥檛 work straight away. They take time to take full effect. So when we use them, we always look at what will happen in the economy in one or two years鈥 time, not just what鈥檚 happening now鈥. And yet the same statement also says that 鈥渕ost of the current causes of the current high rate of inflation won鈥檛 last鈥 and 鈥渨e expect it [inflation] to be much closer to our 2% target in two years鈥 time鈥.
鈥淭he rate of increase in energy bills and petrol should certainly slow over the next two years, but there will be a ratchet effect. Whenever world oil prices go up, there is a corresponding rise in prices at the petrol pump. But we never see the same reduction in prices when world oil prices fall.
鈥淭he IFS reported that the 2010s had been the worst decade for real wage growth since the Napoleonic Wars. With the ONS reporting this week that real wages fell by the highest amount since 2014 and an increase in national insurance contributions by 1.25% is set to be confirmed by Rishi Sunak next week, it is clear that the current pay squeeze is likely to make this decade even worse for living standards than the last one.
鈥淭he Bank of England is worried about the high level of vacancies in the labour market, a measure of 鈥榯ightness鈥, that may lead to employers raising wages to fill these vacancies. But the cause here is the reduction in the labour force. As the Institute for Employment Studies highlight, 鈥渢here are now 1.1 million fewer people in the labour force than we would have expected based on pre-crisis trends鈥. Most of that is due to the over-50s withdrawing from the labour market, but due to a combination of Covid and Brexit, many EU nationals who worked in the UK have also returned to their countries of origin.
鈥淎ccording to the , the increase in vacancies has 鈥渂een driven entirely by low-paying occupations鈥 with the health and social care industry having the highest number with 210,000 unfilled vacancies. These are the occupations that can least afford the rise in the price of food, utilities and petrol.鈥
And Dr Rana, said:
鈥淲ith inflation and cost of living expected to increase even further in the second quarter of the year, after reaching a 30-year record high of 5.5% in January and expected to increase even further to more than 7% in April, the decision does not come as a surprise, being an attempt to control the increase in the general level of prices.
鈥淟et鈥檚 be also reminded of the fact that the BoE was the first major central bank to start increasing interest rates in December 2021 since the hit of the pandemic, with the main concern also at that time on how far it would go and if it was the end of low-interest rates.
鈥淭here is a lot of uncertainty related now to the invasion of Ukraine, with consumer and business confidence likely to be affected, this is why one member of the committee did not vote for an increase but for rates to stay the same.
鈥淭hose who will be mostly and immediately affected by the increase in the cost of borrowing are homeowners on mortgages with variables rates and those whose fixed-rate mortgages are coming to an end and have to renegotiate, and clearly those applying for new mortgages (anticipating the rise, major commercial banks have started to increase the rates before the first increase of the BoE in December 2021).
鈥淭he increase in interest rates is good news for those with saving accounts, but those on lowest incomes who rely on loans for consumption, even more after the pandemic, will once again sadly pay the highest price.鈥
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