Bank of England holds UK rates steady at 3.75% today

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The Bank of England kept interest rates on hold today, but only after an unexpectedly narrow 5-4 vote, and it said it expected a future cut if a sharp fall in inflation due in the coming months proved not to be a blip.

Despite a big reduction to its forecast for Britain’s economic growth this year and a rise in unemployment, the Bank of England left its benchmark Bank Rate at 3.75%.

The decision was in line with almost all forecasts in a Reuters poll of economists ahead of the February meeting of Monetary Policy Committee.

However, the poll had pointed to a more emphatic 7-2 vote in favour of no change in rates.

Governor Andrew Bailey was one of the five MPC members who backed the “hold” decision. He said his position was likely to change if a forecast fall in inflation to the Bank of England’s 2% target from April looked sustainable.

“We need to make sure that inflation stays there, so we’ve held rates unchanged at 3.75% today,” Bailey said in a statement. “All going well, there should be scope for some further reduction in Bank Rate this year.”

He stressed he did not have any specific date in mind for the next rate cut, but the narrower-than-expected vote may prompt investors to bring forward their bets on the Bank of England’s next move.

Before today’s announcement, rate futures markets were pricing little chance of a cut in March and only a roughly 60% chance of one in April.

The Bank of England has been moving cautiously as Britain has the highest inflation rate among the world’s big, rich economies.

It cut rates four times in 2025 including a quarter-point reduction in December which was backed by a 5-4 vote.

But policymakers have stressed they need to move carefully as they approach the level of borrowing costs that is neither inflationary nor a drag on an economy still struggling to overcome the after-effects of Brexit, the Covid pandemic and the 2022 surge in energy prices.

Andew Bailey, the Governor of the Bank of England, in a suit at a press conference

The European Central Bank also kept its benchmark borrowing rate at 2% – almost half that of the Bank of England – today.

The Bank of England said it now expected inflation to slide to around its 2% target in April – helped in large part by measures included in finance minister Rachel Reeves’ budget in late November – much sooner than in its early November forecast.

But the central bank stressed it wanted to make sure the fall was not a one-off.

Its staff forecasts show inflation dropping below its target to 1.7% before hovering around its 2% target from the second quarter of next year through to the end of its three-year forecast period.

Three of the five MPC members who backed no cut this week – chief economist Huw Pill, deputy governor Clare Lombardelli and external member Megan Greene – acknowledged inflation pressures were weakening but favoured “a more prolonged period of policy restriction” to ensure inflation does not get stuck too high.

Bailey and Mann said evidence to support a further cut was increasing, but not yet sufficient.

The four who backed a cut – deputy governors Dave Ramsden and Sarah Breeden plus Swati Dhingra and Alan Taylor – were more worried about inflation falling too low as the economy weakens.

The Bank of England cut its forecast for economic growth for 2026 to 0.9% from a previous estimate of 1.2% before a pickup in 2027 and 2028. It also raised its forecast for the peak in unemployment to 5.3%, up from 5.1% previously.

Despite the slowdown in the economy, private-sector regular wage growth is likely to decelerate only slowly this year, dropping to an annual rate of 3.3% by the end of 2026 from 3.4% in late 2025.

The Bank of England said a roughly 3.25% rate of pay growth was consistent with on-target inflation.

A Bank of England survey published alongside today’s decision showed companies expected pay settlements of 3.4% this year, down from 4% in 2025.

The MPC left its guidance about the outlook for interest rates largely similar to its message after its previous meeting in December.

“On the basis of the current evidence, Bank Rate is likely to be reduced further,” it said in a statement.

“Judgements around further policy easing will become a closer call. The extent and timing of further easing in monetary policy will depend on the evolution of the outlook for inflation,” it added.

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