Bank of England maintains UK interest rates at a record low of 0.1%

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On Thursday, the Bank of England maintained its main interest rate at a historic low of 0.1 percent and revised its growth forecast for the British economy in light of the removal of several coronavirus lockdown restrictions.

Rate-setting of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee voted unanimously to leave borrowing rates steady in a written statement accompanying its decision.

Since the committee’s previous meeting in early May, it has struck a generally optimistic tone regarding the British economy. According to the report, bank employees have raised their estimates for second-quarter growth by about 1.5 percentage points since then, as constraints on economic activity have relaxed. The bank now forecasts that output in June will be just around 2.5 percent lower than it was in the fourth quarter of 2019, right before the epidemic began.

According to the report, the rebound has been most evident in consumer-facing services, where limitations were eased in April.

Following a month-long winter lockout, restrictions have been removed across the UK in recent months. However, the most recent scheduled relaxation for England, the elimination of all remaining prohibitions on social interaction, has been postponed by four weeks due to a return of the virus, this time the more deadly delta form.

The committee looked to be quite upbeat about the recent increase in inflation. The UK, like others, has seen pricing pressures rise in recent months as the global economy recovers.

It stated that it will not tighten monetary policy unless there is clear evidence that considerable progress is being made in reducing spare capacity and reaching the 2% inflation objective in a sustainable manner. In the year to May, inflation in the UK climbed to 2.1 percent, exceeding the bank’s objective of 2 percent.

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