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The past two days have presented us with a clear picture both of the stresses
facing the British economy and the thinking of the Bank of England's Monetary
Policy Committee (MPC). Today saw the release of the minutes of the September
3-4 MPC meeting. Eight of the members opted to keep the repo rate at 5.0%,
one argued for a 50bp cut, and no-one made the case for a rate hike. The members
concluded that there had been both upside and downside developments over the
previous month. Interestingly, the members also emphasized that the Council
would continue to make its judgment each month on the basis of changing evidence.
More details about official thinking were forthcoming in yesterday's open
letter from BoE Governor King to Finance Minister Darling, the second so far
this year. The remit of the MPC calls for the Governor to write an explanatory
letter whenever headline CPI moves more than one percentage point above the
2.0% target, and to continue to do so at three-month intervals if necessary.
Yesterday's letter was triggered by the news that CPI shot up to a sixteen-year
high of 4.7% in August.
Chart 1

Governor King reiterated the MPC's view that the higher inflation triggered
by sharp global increases in energy and food prices must not lead to higher
inflation expectations becoming embedded. Thus "rising commodity, energy and
import prices...cannot, by themselves, generate sustained inflation in the
United Kingdom unless we allow other prices and costs, including pay, to rise
at a faster rate." There is evidence from surveys of a near-term increase in
inflation expectations, and the peak in CPI inflation is now expected to be
higher than was the case three months ago. Therefore, "the Committee has become
firmer in its belief that a period of muted economic growth is necessary to
dampen pressures on prices and wages and return inflation to the target in
the medium term." [emphasis added]
In addition to higher global commodity prices, King also pointed to the wider
effect of the recent depreciation of sterling, which pushed up overall import
price inflation to "around 12%" in Q2, its fastest pace in over twenty years.
Sterling has depreciated even faster since the Governor's last open letter
- hence the conclusion that the expected peak in CPI later this year "will
be significantly higher than anticipated in June." Inflation is now "likely
to remain markedly above the target until well into 2009, particularly if the
recent depreciation of sterling is sustained."
All of which suggests that the MPC is in no hurry to start slashing interest
rates. In the September policy meeting minutes, the members noted that a rate
cut risked sending a signal that the Committee was more focused on economic
growth than on inflation. However, Governor King also noted yesterday that "activity
in the economy has slowed sharply" and that the outlook is "noticeably weaker" than
in June, suggesting some dampening of pressures on prices and wages is likely.
The past two days' data releases certainly add to the picture of an economy
that is slowing sharply. The July-August labor reports saw significant rises
in both measures of unemployment (claimant count and ILO). The ILO-definition
unemployment rate rose to 5.5% in May-July, the highest since 1999. More disconcerting
was the increase in the claimant count measure of unemployed, with the count
in August jumping by 32,500 on the month - the sharpest rise since December
1992, and the seventh-consecutive month of ever-larger increases.
Chart 2

Earnings growth, on the other hand, remained relatively steady, with the three-month
moving average rising 3.7% on the year in July, below the headline rate of
inflation.
Chart 3

Finally, the Confederation of British Industry reported today that the monthly
industrial trends total order books balance fell from -13 in August to -26
this month, the lowest reading since January 2006. The output expectations
balance fell to a seven-year low of -16 (-13 in August). Most disconcerting,
given sterling's recent slide, the export orders balance dropped to -25 (-9
in August).
In sum, while the MPC is minded to keep rates on hold for now, the members,
and the Governor, have been at pains to emphasize that they will "examine the
latest developments, including those in financial markets, to assess how the
balance of risks is evolving at its next and subsequent meetings." With unemployment
rising sharply, export orders sliding, and the ongoing woes in the financial
sector (particularly worrisome for the UK given London's prominence in the
global financial system), our best guess is that the odds now favor a rate
cut in Q4 2008 - but those odds could change again by tomorrow.
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