• About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Procurement Nation
  • Home
  • Suppliers
  • Procurement
    • Shipping
    • Best Procurement Software
    • Supply Chain
      • What is supply chain management?
      • Tyson Foods Food Supply Chain
  • Markets
  • Banking
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Suppliers
  • Procurement
    • Shipping
    • Best Procurement Software
    • Supply Chain
      • What is supply chain management?
      • Tyson Foods Food Supply Chain
  • Markets
  • Banking
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Procurement Nation
No Result
View All Result

Bank of England needs to push back against inflation -Mann

Mark White by Mark White
January 21, 2022
in Supply Chain
0


  • Says BoE should lean against rising inflation expectations
  • Survey shows firms’ expectations above 2% CPI target-Mann
  • Possible ‘regime change’ under way in price behaviour
  • Economists expect BoE to raise rates to 0.5% on Feb. 3
  • UK inflation hit highest since March 1992 in December

LONDON, Jan 21 (Reuters) – The Bank of England needs to lean against inflation pressures and stop expectations of higher price growth from getting entrenched in businesses’ wage and pricing decisions this year, BoE policymaker Catherine Mann said on Friday.

The BoE is widely expected to raise interest rates at its Feb. 3 meeting, after becoming the world’s first major central bank to tighten policy in response to post-pandemic inflation pressures in December.

British inflation in December was its highest in nearly 30 years at 5.4%, and Mann said the BoE’s monthly survey of businesses showed their pricing and wage-setting expectations were not consistent with inflation returning to its 2% target.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

“The ingredients appear to be in place for inflation to stay strong for longer, but costs becoming embedded in prices to create a reinforcing dynamic is not inevitable,” Mann said in a speech to OMFIF, a central banking think tank.

“In my view, the objective for monetary policy now should be to lean against this ‘strong-for-longer’ scenario,” she added.

Mann is the first BoE official to give a speech on monetary policy since the Dec. 16 rate rise. Chief Economist Huw Pill said in a CNBC interview on Dec. 17 after that more rate rises were likely if inflation stayed high, and Governor Andrew Bailey told a parliament committee on Wednesday that he was concerned about the outlook for natural gas prices and wages. read more

Mann, who voted with the majority on the BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee to raise rates in December, said she was waiting for new BoE staff briefings before she decided whether rates needed to increase in February.

Depending on the strength of global inflation pressures, BoE monetary policy could need to be tighter than warranted by British domestic economic conditions alone, she said.

ACT SOONER, NOT LATER

But early action to push down on the public’s and businesses’ inflation expectations could limit the amount of tightening needed further along the line.

“To the extent that monetary policy actions now dampen expectations, and to the extent that any deceleration of global prices is passed through to UK inflation, and to the extent that financial markets are already cautioning decisions, the next steps could exhibit a shallower path,” Mann said.

In a question and answer session, Mann rejected a charge that the BoE had been too slow to start raising rates.

Higher rates would have had little effect on surging energy prices or global supply chain problems, employment remained below pre-COVID levels and economic output was still lower than where it would have been without the pandemic, she said.

Equally, the BoE could not take the same approach as in 2011 when there was a spike in oil prices that also pushed inflation above 5%, but which came at a time when British unemployment was near its peak after the global financial crisis.

“Where we are now, I think, is potentially a ‘regime change’ where we have a tight labour market, we have tight goods markets … That is an environment where firms and workers see themselves as having pricing power,” Mann said.

Central bankers have generally played down any similarity between now and the 1970s, when most Western economies suffered from a self-reinforcing spiral of wages and prices at a time of greater trade union power and less focused monetary policy.

But even with an unfavourable inflationary backdrop, Mann said it was unclear how far interest rates would need to rise.

Businesses’ ability to raise prices would be limited by the ongoing squeeze on consumers’ disposable income, amplified by tax rises taking effect in April. A “very steep yield curve” in financial markets also tightened financial conditions.

Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com

Reporting by David Milliken
Editing by William Schomberg and Alison Williams

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.



Source link

Previous Post

Xbox Series S offered at rare deal from Woot

Next Post

Best United credit cards | CNN Underscored

Mark White

Mark White

Mark White is the editor of the ProcurementNation, a Media Outlet covering supply chain and logistics issues. He joined The New York Times in 2007 as an commodities reporter, and most recently served as foreign-exchange editor in New York.

Next Post
Best United credit cards | CNN Underscored

Best United credit cards | CNN Underscored

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • About
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact Us
Call us: +1 234 JEG THEME

© 2021 Procurement Nation - Supply Chain & Logistics News

No Result
View All Result
  • Procurement
  • Supply Chain
  • Logistics
  • Science
  • Technology

© 2021 Procurement Nation - Supply Chain & Logistics News