The quarterly Monetary Policy Report highlighted that although global inflationary pressures remain elevated, they seem to have peaked in many developed economies, including in the United Kingdom. However, the BoE acknowledges that domestic inflation has remained stronger than expected due to persistent wage pressures. It projects CPI inflation to fall back sharply towards the end of 2023 to around 4% due to falling prices of energy and goods prices (see Chart 1).
The report emphasised that the recent rate increases will only impact the economy in the coming quarters. Markets currently anticipate another 0.5% rate hike, with Bank Rate now expected to peak at 4.5% in 2023Q3, that is, below the 5.25% peak expected in November 2022. Incoming data over the next month will be crucial in assessing how quickly inflationary pressures are receding and how much tighter monetary policy needs to be to return inflation to the 2% target.