The restrictive stance of monetary policy will continue to affect economic activity in the coming months. MPC estimates suggest that most of the impact of higher interest rates has already fed through to GDP growth. Therefore, the MPC’s base-case is that, going forward, second-round effects in inflation from previous shocks fade without much impact on activity.
As such, GDP growth forecasts for this year rose, with growth now expected to reach 1.25% YoY in 2024 but decelerate to 1% YoY in 2025 (see Chart 2). This, in part, reflects the continued restrictive stance of monetary policy, with unemployment projected to increase to 4.8% before receding again.
The MPC’s concern over persistent second-round effects can be interpreted as a signal that they will follow a cautious approach in the coming months, with a slow pace of monetary policy easing.
Monetary policy outlook
Further policy decisions will remain dependent on upcoming economic data. However, rather than having a specific target for the change they expect to see on key variables such as services inflation and wage growth, officials will look at the medium-term outlook, assessing how restrictive monetary policy is and how much slack it has created in the economy. Although this means little forward guidance is provided, it gives the MPC a level of flexibility to operate based on the transmission mechanisms of monetary policy to the economy.
For the time being, the MPC reiterated that rates will need to remain restrictive for long enough to ensure the risks to inflation returning sustainably to the 2% target have dissipated further. Markets are currently pricing in a further one to two rate cuts before the end of the year.