UK Interest Rates Should Be Hiked Sooner, Says Bank Of England's Chief Economist

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Bank of England Governor Mark Carney smiles during the bank's quarterly inflation report news conference at the Bank of England in London November 13, 2013. Britain's unemployment rate will fall much faster than previously expected due to a strengthening economic recovery, the Bank of England said on Wednesday, but it stressed that it was in no hurry to raise interest rates. REUTERS/Toby Melville (BUSINESS EMPLOYMENT)
TOBY MELVILLE/WPA Rota

UK interest rates should be raised sooner rather than later, the Bank of England's new chief economist has said, so that rate-setters remain "on the front foot".

Amid increasing signals from the Bank that interest rates could start rising from their historic low of 0.5% by the end of the year, Andy Haldane argued that an early rise would allow for more gradual increases as the economic recovery takes hold.

Haldane's first public comments on monetary policy, made in a speech in Scarborough, come as business secretary Vince Cable warned officials that a premature rate rise could derail the recovery.

Speaking at Bloomberg on Tuesday, the Lib Dem cabinet minister warned: "My immediate concern as business secretary is if these incipient inflationary pressures lead to a rise in interest rates sooner and further than is warranted by the economy as a whole, it could place in jeopardy our hopes for a sustained and balanced recovery."

By contrast, Haldane, who sits on its Monetary Policy Committee, argued that delaying an interest rate rise could mean that the Bank would have to react "fast and furiously" later to twists and turns in the economic recovery.

Adopting a cricket metaphor, he said: “It is a close run thing, with the odds at present slightly favouring the front foot."

The Bank's chief economist stressed that the first rate rise would be a "welcome" sign that "the economy has recovered sufficiently to thrive on smaller doses of monetary medicine."

Haldane's remarks come after the latest minutes from the MPC's meeting in June indicate that they found "somewhat surprising" the markets' expectation that they would first raise rates next spring, despite other officials warning in recent months that it was the "most likely" path.

Bank governor Mark Carney indicated in his Mansion House speech that "gradual and limited" interest rate rises were "coming nearer". Carney's comments came soon after rate-setter Ian McCafferty said that the "appropriate" time to raise interest rates was approaching.

Another Bank rate-setter, David Miles, who has so far never voted for an interest rate rise, said today that he expected to vote to raise rates from their 0.5% historic low by next May.

"There was a chance that I would set a record which I had no desire to hold, which is someone who who’d done two terms on the MPC and in the whole six years had never voted to change interest rates," he told the Times. "It is not a record I want to set."

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