CPI inflation rose to 2.5% in February. The Committee expects inflation to rise further this year, reflecting the continuing impact of higher energy and food prices, as well as the recent depreciation of sterling on import costs. Such pressures are already evident in producer input costs and pricing intentions.
Even if commodity prices remain at their current high levels, inflation should fall back. But to ensure that inflation meets the 2% target in the medium term, the Committee needs to balance two risks. On the upside, above-target inflation this year could raise inflation expectations so that, in the absence of some margin of spare capacity, inflation would remain above the target. On the downside, the disruption in financial markets could lead to a slowdown in the economy that was sufficiently sharp to pull inflation below the target.
In the Committee’s judgement, the balance of these risks to the inflation outlook in the medium term justifies a cut in Bank Rate this month. Credit conditions have tightened and the availability of credit appears to be worsening. While the recent depreciation in sterling will support net exports, the prospects for output growth abroad have deteriorated. In the United Kingdom, business surveys suggest that growth has begun to moderate and that a margin of spare capacity will emerge during this year. This should help to keep domestic inflationary pressures in check in the medium term.
Against that background, the Committee judged that a reduction in Bank Rate of 0.25 percentage points to 5.0% was necessary to meet the 2% target for CPI inflation in the medium term.
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CPI inflation was close to the 2% target in December. Pay growth was steady. But some measures of inflation expectations rose. In the central projection, higher energy, food and import prices push inflation up sharply in the near term. Inflation then drops back to a little above the 2% target in the medium term, as the temporary boost from higher energy prices disappears and capacity pressures moderate. The risks to inflation are balanced. The combination of slow growth and above-target inflation poses substantial challenges for policy.
Against that background, UK banks tightened the terms offered on new loans to households and businesses. And the potential deterioration in banks' capital ratios as off balance sheet loans are re-intermediated may further restrain new lending. But it is difficult to judge the eventual impact on demand, particularly since falling asset prices could interact with banks' capital requirements and borrowers' collateral limits to amplify the contraction in spending.
Market participants' expectations of the near-term path of policy rates fell. The MPC cut Bank Rate by 0.25 percentage points to 5.5% at its December meeting. Market participants expected Bank Rate to fall to around 4.5% during 2008.
The sterling effective exchange rate depreciated by 6%, the largest three-monthly fall since the exit from the ERM. Market concerns about the size of the UK current account deficit - the highest relative to GDP in the G7- may have been a factor.
Business investment rebounded in Q3. But investment intentions eased towards the year end. The weaker and more uncertain outlook for demand, reduced access to external finance and falling commercial property prices are all likely to weigh on capital spending over the coming year.
Government spending continued to make a moderate contribution to overall demand growth. According to the fiscal plans set out in October's Pre-Budget Report, the public sector's contribution to nominal demand growth is set to decline over the forecast period.
Overall, the Committee expects a modest slowing in the growth of the main UK export markets, though by somewhat more than in November. That is offset by the depreciation of sterling, which can be expected to boost UK competitiveness. Consequently net trade is expected to add to GDP growth over the next few years, contrary to the experience over much of the past decade.
Chart 1 shows the Committee's best collective judgement for four-quarter GDP growth, assuming that Bank Rate follows the declining path implied by market yields. The fan also extends into the past, reflecting the present uncertainty about the final estimates of GDP. In the central projection, output growth slows markedly through 2008 as tighter credit conditions and weaker real income growth bear down on domestic demand. Growth then starts to recover, as credit conditions improve and the effects of lower interest rates and weaker sterling work through. The projected slowdown is somewhat deeper and more prolonged than in the November Report.
Private sector pay growth was relatively muted last year. There are few pay settlements for 2008 available so far, but according to a survey of contacts of the Bank's regional Agents, companies expect awards to be similar to those in 2007. Measures of labour market tightness based on official data have changed little over the past few months, although survey measures point to some easing.
A central question is whether the episode of above-target CPI inflation during 2006-07 and the prospective repeat this year will prompt a sustained rise in inflation expectations, with a risk of heightened inflationary pressures in the medium term. Survey measures of household inflation expectations have risen over the past year or so. Measures derived from financial market instruments also rose, though that may reflect factors specific to the index-linked gilts market.



