(LONDON) The Bank of England raised rates by 0.25 percentage point on Thursday, to a high since early 2008 at 5.25%, to fight inflation that it expects to be more persistent, despite its decline on the markets. last months.

“Certain crucial indicators, including wage increases, suggest that more persistent inflationary pressures are materializing. The (Monetary Policy, or MPC) Committee decided at this meeting to raise rates “for the 14th consecutive time, justifies the central bank in the minutes of its meeting.

The Bank of England opts for a hike of the same magnitude as those of the American Federal Reserve (Fed) and the European Central Bank (ECB) at the end of July, even if the British monetary authority revises slightly upwards its forecasts for longer term inflation: 2.5% in 2024 and 1.5% in 2025.

According to the latest available data, inflation remains at 7.9% year on year in the United Kingdom in June, the highest of the rich G7 countries despite a marked slowdown, fueling a crisis in the cost of living across the Channel.

“Inflation is falling and that is good news. We know that inflation most directly affects the less wealthy and we need to make sure it trickles back to our 2% target,” BoE chief Andrew Bailey said in a statement.

Goods and commodity prices, especially energy, sent inflation soaring after the successive shocks of Brexit, COVID-19 and then the Russian invasion of Ukraine, but it is now the inflation generated within the United Kingdom itself which worries the central bank.

Criticized for underestimating the magnitude of these shocks, the BoE claims to have revised its projections from its last report in May to “incorporate some of the upside risks to inflation, local prices and wages”. .

The central bank assumes “tight monetary policy”, which weighs on growth, and promises that “the MPC will ensure that the bank rate remains sufficiently restrictive long enough” to depress inflation.

“Our policy is starting to have an effect. Given the delays in transmitting economic policy to the real economy, it is not surprising that this has taken time,” Bailey explained at a press conference.

This weight on the economy should not send the United Kingdom into recession, believes the BoE, but the central bank now forecasts sluggish growth of 0.5% in 2024 and 0.25% in 2025, less well. than its already gloomy May projections (at 0.75% in 2024 and 0.75% in 2025).

Rate hikes undermine the borrowing power of both households and businesses. And mortgages aren’t fixed for the long term in the UK, so many homeowners are seeing their rates go up.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who had promised when he came to power to halve inflation, then in double digits, supports the central bank in its action.

“But that doesn’t mean it’s easy for families facing higher monthly payments on their home loans, so we’ll continue to do what we can to help households,” Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt said on Thursday. , in a press release. Opposition and unions, however, accuse the conservative majority of not having done enough to fight the cost of living crisis.

The central bank’s strategy is divided within the MPC itself: two of its nine members wanted to raise rates by 0.5 percentage points, and one voter wanted to leave rates unchanged to avoid dragging down the economy.

The central bank has not amended its message and still warns that, “if there is evidence of persistent inflationary pressures, further monetary policy tightening would be needed.”

On the foreign exchange market, the pound remained at half mast on Thursday, some investors having hoped for a clearer message from the BoE.

“New BoE forecasts suggest more upside is likely, but the top is approaching,” said Samuel Tombs, analyst at Pantheon MacroEconomics.