The Bank of England has maintained interest rates at 3.75%, with financial stability considerations playing a role alongside traditional inflation and growth concerns. The committee must ensure monetary policy doesn’t create financial system risks.
The monetary policy committee’s 5-4 vote to hold rates incorporated assessments of how rate changes might affect financial stability. While this isn’t explicitly detailed in public communications, policymakers must consider whether rapid rate cuts could fuel excessive risk-taking or asset price bubbles.
Rates have fallen from much higher levels since mid-2024 through six previous cuts. Each reduction has made borrowing cheaper and potentially encouraged more financial risk-taking. Some committee members may worry that cutting too quickly could lead to excessive leverage or unsustainable asset price increases that later require painful correction.
However, maintaining rates too high for too long creates different financial stability risks. Weaker growth and rising unemployment could impair borrowers’ ability to service debts, leading to increased defaults. The forecast showing GDP growth of just 0.9% and unemployment reaching 5.3% suggests these risks are material.
Governor Andrew Bailey must balance these competing financial stability concerns alongside the primary mandate of price stability. His projection that inflation will fall to around 2% by spring suggests the inflation mandate is being met. The question is whether the financial system is resilient enough to handle either continued restrictive rates or further easing. Chancellor Rachel Reeves’s budget measures, including utility bill cuts and rail fare freezes from April, should support household debt servicing capacity by reducing living costs, potentially easing some financial stability concerns about maintaining higher rates.
Bank of England Keeps Rates at 3.75% as Financial Stability Considerations Factor Into Decision
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