OPINION

Published 17:12 IST, May 8th 2024

BoE cavalry will arrive too late for Rishi Sunak

Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, who was likened to an alluring turtle by his predecessor Mark Carney for his cautious decisions.

Rishi Sunak to hike UK’s defence spending | Image: PTI
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Rishi business. It’s Dishy Rishi versus Big Sexy Turtle. After a big loss in local polls, UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak could really use an economic rebound to pull off an improbable comeback in this year’s elections. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, who was likened to an alluring turtle by his predecessor Mark Carney for his cautious decisions, would like a slowdown in inflation so he can cut rates. By time he does that, it could be too late for PM.

Sunak is clearly in trouble. After last week’s disastrous local elections, his Conservative Party trails  opposition Labour Party by 20 percentage points in polls. With a national election likely to take place in November, time is running out.

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One of his biggest problems is that country is not growing fast enough for his citizens to feel good about government. UK GDP will expand by just 0.4% this year, according to Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, slowest rate in G7 apart from Germany. In 2025, Britain will be world’s worst-performing vanced economy with growth of just 1%, OECD reckons.

That’s still too fast for Bailey. Strong growth in wages and prices of services, which are both increasing at an annual rate of 6%, make it hard for BoE to cut rates. Indeed, central bank’s monetary policy committee is almost certain to keep borrowing costs at a 16-year high of 5.25% on Thursday. High rates crimp consumption, which OECD expects to rise by just 0.7% in 2024, and put a dampener on housing market – UK house prices rose by 0.1% on a monthly basis in April, after dropping 0.9% in March, according to an index compiled by Halifax. Those are two key ingredients of any political “goodwill factor”.

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BoE is independent and its main job is to get inflation down to 2%, but Bailey may offer some succour to Sunak soon. central bank expects inflation to fall from current 3.2% to just above 2% in next three months. That’s leing trers to bet BoE could lower borrowing costs as early as August and n again in November, according to derivatives prices collected by LSEG.

Unfortunately for Sunak and Conservatives, interest rate movements tend to affect real economy at a Big Sexy Turtle-like pace: re’s usually a lag of between 12 and 18 months. If Sunak opts to brave polls late this year, a rate cut in August would still be a nice-to-have from a sentiment perspective. But embattled UK leer isn’t even guaranteed that.

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17:12 IST, May 8th 2024