Although the Bank of England (BoE) has revised its forward guidance
policy, scrapping its 7 percent unemployment target, the central bank
will not raise the benchmark interest rate until the second half of
2015, said economists in London Wednesday.During the press release of
its quarterly Inflation Report, Mark Carney, the governor of BoE said
the central bank would now be looking at wider range of indicators,
including wages, labor participation,Tampon productivity
and unemployment rate, as the policy targets.He said the recovery is
gaining momentum and better than expectation, but there was still
"scope" for the economy to maintain the interest rate at record low of
0.5 percent, and the assets purchasing plan would not be scaled back
until the base rate rising.BMW ICOMFollowing
Federal Reserves, British central bank implemented the forward guidance
policy last August, asserting to remain the ultra low interest rate
target and 375 billion pounds (621.67 billion U.S. dollars) quantitative
easing policy until unemployment rate hit the 7 percent threshold.Peter
Spencer, chief economic adviser to the EY ITEM Club, a London-based
independent economic think tank, commented that "Today's update to
forward guidance was inevitable, with the recent unemployment having
forced Mark Carney's hand."
BoE has also raised its economic
growth forecast for 2014 to 3.4 percent, revised from 2.8 percent it
made previously. In medium term, however, unemployment rate in Britain
will sink to 6-6.5 percent, down from 7.1 percent in the three months to
last November."Carney has insisted that rates will remain low for some
time, which should put the bed the uncertainty surrounding the immediate
path of monetary policy.Antique bath fixtures But
the outlook for the next couple of years is less certain and there will
be an onus on BoE to steer the markets through greater levels of
communication, in particular more interviews and speeches," said Spencer
in his email comment.Spencer also said BoE's new guidance for the pace
of tightening do not alter their view that the first rate rise will come
in the third quarter of 2015, because the central bank wants to
sustained pickup in real wages and a more balanced recovery.Jonathan
Loynes, Chief European Economist at Capital Economist, that the basic
message that BoE is in no hurry to tighten monetary policy, and will
tread very cautiously when it does.The central bank will seek to use
policy to absorb the economy's spare capacity, and there is scope to use
up spare capacity further before raising rates, said Loynes.Even "when
BoE raises rates, it will do so only gradually. Any rises in rates will
be limited, and that the shock of asset purchases will remain unchanged
until rates rise," added Loynes.The London-based economic research
company remains its forecast on the first rate hike happening late next
year.
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