Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said on Wednesday that the central bank “will do what it takes” to get inflation down to its 2 per cent target, adding that he had not yet seen enough progress towards that goal to be confident.
Bailey and other top officials have sought to counter investor speculation about when the BoE might start to cut borrowing costs from their 15-year high after a slowing of the country’s high inflation rate and signs of an economic slowdown.
“Two percent is our target and we will do what it takes to get there,” Bailey said in an interview with Daily Focus, a news service in central England. “We are not in a place now where we can discuss cutting interest rates – that is not happening.”
“We need to see how the final part of the journey down to 2 per cent inflation plays out; we have not seen enough of that journey yet to be confident.”
Bailey said this week that getting inflation down to 2 per cent will be “hard work” as most of its recent fall was due to the unwinding of the jump in energy costs last year.
The central bank kept rates on hold for a second consecutive meeting this month after 14 increases in a row to tackle an inflation rate that peaked above 11 per cent just over a year ago before falling to 4.6 per cent last month.
The country’s budget watchdog downgraded its economic growth outlook for Britain last week to 0.7 per cent for next year from the 1.8 per cent it had estimated in March.
Bailey acknowledged that there was “some weakening of economic activity,” adding that it was a “realist view” not “ultra-pessimist” as some critics have alleged.
“We’ve got to get on and bring inflation down to our target of 2 per cent. That is the best thing we can do for growth in the economy – and we will do it.”