The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee has voted to maintain Bank Rate at 3.75 percent, a decision that was widely expected by financial markets but that was accompanied by minutes revealing a more active debate among committee members than the headline decision suggested.
The vote was 7-2, with two members voting for a quarter-point cut. The majority argued that while inflation had fallen significantly from its peak, the evidence that it would remain sustainably at the 2 percent target was not yet conclusive. They pointed to the continued strength of wage growth, the persistence of services inflation, and the uncertainty created by the ongoing disruptions to global energy markets and trade routes.
The two members who voted for a cut argued that the balance of risks had shifted. They noted that the full effects of the tightening that had already occurred had not yet been felt, that the labour market was clearly softening, and that the risk of overtightening — and causing unnecessary damage to the economy — was now greater than the risk of allowing inflation to persist.
The minutes reveal a committee that is genuinely uncertain about the path ahead, a notable departure from the more confident posture of previous years. The committee's assessment of the economic outlook is notably cautious, emphasising the width of the confidence intervals around its central forecasts and the range of plausible outcomes.
Financial markets interpreted the minutes as consistent with a rate cut later in the year, with the timing dependent on the evolution of the data over the summer. The next MPC meeting is scheduled for August.

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