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Bank of England raises interest rates by 0.25%

The Bank of England raised interest rates by 0.25 percentage points to 3.75% on 6 November saying the global economic recovery appears to be gathering momentum but with inflationary pressures likely to build a "modest" increase was required.

Can UK's 'economic luck' last'?

Mervyn King described the UK's "non-inflationary consistently expansionary" economic performance since sterling's eviction from the exchange rate mechanism as "nice" earlier this month. Can the "nice" performance last, an article in the Financial Times…

Bank of England MPC Minutes 8/9 October 2003

Minutes of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee Meeting were released on 22 October for the meeting of 8 and 9 October 2003. Deputy governor Andrew Large, executive director Paul Tucker and external MPC members Kate Barker and Stephen Nickell,…

Minutes show BoE came close to rate increase

Minutes from the Bank of England's October Monetary Policy Committee meeting published on Wednesday 22 October showed four of the nine members, including deputy governor Andrew Large, voted for an increase in interest rates, according to Reuters. The…

Greenspan to speak in UK at CBI conference

Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan will speak by video link to the Confederation of British Industry's national conference which is being held from 16-18 November at the ICC in Birmingham, England, according to a report by Reuters.

Central Banks and Supreme Courts by C Goodhart

This Working Paper from the Financial Markets Group claims that a significant, large part of the reason for the differing procedures of the legal and monetary policy bodies in the UK, USA, and EU derives from a political science root. How do you deal…

BoE's King on the monetary policy framework

In his first speech as Governor of the Bank of England, Mervyn King said on 14 October that the present monetary and fiscal frameworks provide a seaworthy policy vessel, but, as all sailors know, fog, especially statistical fog, can be dangerous. So we…

King: no need for low rates if world recovers

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King has said, according to Reuters, that if the world economy recovers, interest rates will not need to remain as low as they are. "So far we have been keeping rates low to ensure there was sufficient growth in domestic…

Is inflation targeting yesterday's success story?

The problem now for the Bank of England, this article in The Independent suggests, is that the achievement of low and stable inflation may have become a little too easy. Inflation targeting may work very well in puncturing a bubble of inflationary…

Ex-BoE governor George joins Nestle board

Former governor of the Bank of England Sir Edward George has swapped gold bars for chocolate bars after being appointed to the board of Nestle, the world's largest food and confectionary company, according to the Daily Telegraph. He follows in the wake…

Bean on Inflation Targeting: The UK Experience

In the speech 'Inflation Targeting: The UK Experience' given on 1 October Charles Bean of the Bank of England said it was "extraordinarily difficult" to know how much to raise interest rates, if at all, to prevent a bubble in the housing market and an…

BoE's Chief Economist Bean cautious on rate rise

The Bank of England's chief economist Charles Bean said in a speech Wednesday there were good reasons for the long-term level of house prices in the UK to be higher, including low interest rates, an increase in the numbers of people living alone, and…

UK economy growth 'double the estimate'

The British economy grew twice as fast as previously thought during the second quarter of this year, official figures have showed, according to the Financial Times. The Office for National Statistics revised its estimates of growth in gross domestic…

Warning issued over UK money laundering directive

The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants warned the UK Treasury on Monday 29 September, according to the Financial Times, that the new money laundering directive, due to come into force in January, may swamp the National Criminal Intelligence…

Central banks: What to achieve & how to get there

This article in the Independent newspaper says that underneath it all, central bankers are ordinary folk, and they, too, face difficulties in achieving what they want. At the Bank of England, the Monetary Policy Committee's life has been relatively short…

Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Autumn 2003

The Bank of England released its Quarterly Bulletin, Autumn 2003, on 26 September. The Bulletin includes articles titled 'Public expectations of UK inflation' and 'The optimal rate of inflation: an academic perspective'. The report also warns that…

Mervyn's smile

When the Bank of England's top brass was hauled in front of the Treasury Select Committee to explain their August Inflation Report, Mervyn King, the Bank's new governor, stole the show - although the committee did probe the voting habits of some of the…

Mervyn picks executive team

Mervyn King has completed the reshuffle of his executive team at the Bank of England. Andrew Bailey and Nigel Jenkinson are promoted, Merlyn Lowther retires and Alastair Clark is switched to become special adviser to the governor.

Mervyn King testifies to UK Treasury committee

Bank of England governor Mervyn King made a statement to the UK Treasury Select Committee, in which he discusses the outlook for the economy as well as the changeover of the BOE inflation index from RPIX to HICP: "the change in the target will need to be…

King signals Basel accord delay

Mervyn King, governor of the Bank of England, on Thursday told the UK Treasury Select Committee that the introduction of the new Basel capital accord "may take more time than had originally been hoped". He said that the Basel committee was a "long way…

King posits new Stability and Growth Pact

Bank of England governor Mervyn King showed himself to be at odds with his ECB counterparts by suggesting to the UK Treasury Select Committee on Thursday that Europe's current rules to keep member states' fiscal policies in check are not sustainable.

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