By David Milliken and Andy Bruce
LONDON (Reuters) – Britain’s surging inflation could slow thanks to plans by new Prime Minister Liz Truss to help households and businesses cope with rocketing energy costs, but it was too soon to say what that means for interest rates, the BoE’s chief economist said.
The central bank has picked up its pace of increases in borrowing costs in a bid to limit the damage for the world’s fifth-biggest economy from a leap in inflation above 10%, even as it expects a recession to start later this year.
The BoE forecast in August that inflation would exceed 13%, and some economists say it will go higher than that if gas prices – pushed up by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – stay high.
“One of the things that does seem to be under consideration … is a change to the relationship between gas prices and retail gas prices in a direction that will lower headline inflation, relative to what we were forecasting,” Huw Pill told lawmakers.
While the subsidies for households could add to demand and create more inflation pressure, “net-net on the implications for headline inflation in the short term, I would expect that to see a decline,” Pill said.
Truss moved into Downing Street on Tuesday, promising to help Britain through its gas price shock, and she is expected to announce details of her plans on Thursday.
Pill said the implications for monetary policy from the government’s plans remained unclear.
“I think there’s just too much uncertainty to have a strong view right now, given the lack of details.”
But he added that the BoE would ensure that government spending did not generate inflation.
“Fiscal policies will have their own dynamics, as will other shocks to the economy, and we as the central bank, our role is, our mandate is, our remit is to return inflation to the target,” Pill said.
Governor Andrew Bailey, also speaking to parliament’s Treasury Committee, welcomed Truss’ impending announcement of her plans this week.
“It’s not for us to comment on what fiscal policy will be and we will wait and see what it is … but I do very much welcome the fact that there will be, as I understand it, announcements this week because I think that will help to, in a sense, frame policy and that’s important,” he said.
“It’s important that there is a clear way forward on policy … That will be important for markets to understand what is going to happen.”
British government bond prices have slumped on worries about the scale of borrowing needed to fund Truss’ cost-of-living support plans and the tax cuts she has promised, pushing 10-year British government bond yields to their highest since 2011.
Deutsche Bank said on Wednesday that the energy price support and tax cuts planned by Truss could cost almost 200 billion pounds, about half Britain’s historic pandemic spending push.
Investors are pricing in the BoE raising the Bank Rate to almost 4.5% by the middle of 2023, up from 1.75% now, although most economists have said they think it will peak at a lower level, given the likelihood of a recession starting later this year.
Rate futures were putting a 54% chance of a three-quarters-of-a-percentage point increase in the Bank Rate at the BoE’s next scheduled policy announcement on Sept. 15. Earlier on Wednesday, that probability stood at nearly 70%.
The last time the central bank raised rates by at least 75 basis points was in 1989.
(Reporting by David Milliken and Andy Bruce; Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by William James and Bernadette Baum)