Bank Of England Holds Interest Rates, Resists Call For More Economic Medicine

Bank Of England Holds Interest Rates, Resists Call For More Economic Medicine

The Bank of England has put more emergency medicine for the UK economy on hold, despite more evidence that the recovery is grinding to a halt.

Interest rates were kept at a record low of 0.5% while the Bank's quantitative easing (QE) programme remained at £275 billion following the increase of £75 billion in October.

The Bank has already acknowledged that it will take until February to administer the recent expansion in its QE programme. Economists expect a further £50 billion of QE from the Bank of England in both the first and second quarters of 2012, taking the total up to £375 billion.

While the Bank's Monetary Policy Committee was forced to sit on its hands, counterparts at the European Central Bank (ECB) were mulling whether to slash rates from 1.25%.

Even in the last financial crisis, the ECB's rate never went below 1%, where it stood for two years until April this year.

After raising rates twice earlier this year under former president Jean-Claude Trichet, the ECB cut rates at new president Mario Draghi's first meeting last month, fuelling expectations that Europe's debt crisis will prompt more cuts.

The crisis in the eurozone - which the Bank of England cited as one of the key threats to the UK recovery - continues to escalate as EU leaders are yet to deliver a concrete plan to resolve the region's problems.

The latest snapshot of the UK economy has made for gloomy reading, with influential think-tank NIESR estimating that growth slowed again in the three months to November to 0.3%, from 0.4% in the three months to October.

And official figures on Wednesday showed a larger-than-expected 0.7% contraction in industrial production and manufacturing in October, further fuelling fears of a double-dip recession.

It followed warnings from Bank Governor Sir Mervyn King that the UK faces a "systemic crisis" and that banks should brace themselves for a potential eurozone collapse amid fears of a second credit crunch.

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