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Debate rages over interest rate rises - Landlord Today reader poll

Debate is raging over whether there will be a 15th successive interest rate rise when the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee meets towards the end of next month.

The debate follows a flurry of figures about the UK economy.

Inflation idropped to 6.8 per cent in the year to July from 7.9 per cent in June, according to the Office for National Statistics. This is the second month in a row that the rate of inflation has dropped sharply and it is now at a 15-month low.

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However, although the latest figure was driven by a reduction in the energy price cap and food costs rising less rapidly - particularly milk, bread and cereals - core inflation (stripping out energy and food) remains relatively high.

The inflation news follows data showing that wages grew at a record annual pace in the April to June period: regular pay rose by 7.8 per cent, the highest annual growth rate since comparable records began in 2001.

Julian Jessop, economics fellow at the free market think tank the Institute of Economic Affairs, says: “The inflation data shows a welcome fall in the headline rate, but core inflation that excludes food and energy remains stuck at 6.9 per cent. The headline rate is also likely to tick up in August, reflecting higher fuel and alcohol prices, some unhelpful base effects, and the continued strength of the labour market. 

“There are still plenty of reasons to expect inflation to tumble over the rest of the year, notably the sharp slowdown in money and credit growth. Rising unemployment and falling vacancies suggest that wage pressures will soon peak too.

“Unfortunately, the Bank of England continues to look backwards at the headline data over the last month or two, rather than pause to assess the impact of the substantial tightening in policy that is already in place. This makes another unnecessary interest rate increase more likely.”

Nicholas Mendes from the respected mortgage broker John Charcol adds: “UK inflation remains higher compared to other nations and above the bank of England target of 2.0 per cent. Following [the inflation] announcement markets are expected to remain stable with no sudden knee jerk reactions that we have experienced previously.

“Prior to this announcement markets had priced in a base rate rise peak of 6.0 per cent which means we are certain to see a further rise of 0.25 per cent in September regardless of the inflationary data, meaning a 15th base rate increase.”

However, some feel there is enough scope for the Bank to stop further rises.

Kate Steere, deputy editor and housing expert at personal finance comparison site Finder, says: “I’m hopeful this fall in inflation could lead the Bank of England to pause its base rate hikes at the next Bank of England monetary policy committee meeting. This could help provoke a mortgage price war amongst the big providers, resulting in some more competitive rate options finally hitting the market. This would give some much-needed relief to prospective buyers and mortgage holders in the UK.”

And Ben Thompson, deputy chief executive of the Mortgage Advice Bureau, adds: “Inflation being below average wage growth could mark a turning point in the cost of living crisis, and potentially signal good news for mortgage customers, with lenders already reducing their rates and more manageable payments becoming a reality.”

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Poll: Most think the Bank of England will raise rates again - but SHOULD the bank do so?

PLACE YOUR VOTE BELOW


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    The BoE is breaking people with its interest rate rises. Inflation is coming down due to mainly external factors, it needs to take its foot of the pedal & give people some respite. Mortgage holder & business owners will be made bankrupt if the rates keep rising.

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    The real cause of this inflation is being involved in a war that we shouldn’t be part of and Biden irresponsibly creating $5.9 Trillion to flood the world with. The poorest usually are the ones that suffer for these actions.
    Mortgages and rent are heavily affected by BOE actions and are the main reason for wage increases. If we could maybe ringfence property lending costs this could cause the cycle to stop - cheaper living

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    Higher interest rates only hurt a minority of people but hurt them very badly.

    I agree that the reasons for the high inflation rate are mainly external and beyond our control but if we did have to rein in our spending to control inflation it needs to be done by reining in everyone's spending by increasing taxes and/or reducing benefits so everyone has less to spend and the National Debt gains the benefit of both measures.

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    We have high inflation due to our governments recklessness during Covid - they spent crazy amounts of money, throwing it at anyone and everyone like confetti. Loans to businesses that didn’t need them, grants, furlough, defective PPE (that was not needed in the first place), at the same time shutting down the economy so nobody was paying tax to fund it all. High inflation was the inevitable result and the government are acting like it couldn’t have been predicted and most of us seem to have either forgotten or never even made the link.

    Nothing to do with America - if they print shed loads of dollars, that doesn’t cause us to have inflation - it’s because we did the printing ourselves (and by we, I mean our government).

    And now I see suggestions like “we need to raise taxes” - what!? We are one of the most highly taxed countries in the world. If you want to lower inflation you reduce taxes, and grow the economy. Lower taxes mean businesses flourish and attract more investment and startups, in turn more jobs, and the greater competition drives down prices - which leads to lower inflation.

    Inflation exists not because we are spending too much, it’s because too many pounds were printed, the value of those pounds has reduced and so we are spending more pounds to buy the same things that we always have. It’s the money printing that has caused inflation - not our spending habits. Reducing spending means to get by with less - and many have already cut their costs as far as they can. We should all understand this so that when government make this lie to make it sound like it’s our fault, we can hold them accountable and hit them with the truth that it is the government spending habits that have caused all this.

    End of rant.

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    Agreed, many of those '' bounce back loans'' that the government gauranteed will never be paid back it was just free money

     
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    Some very valid points Steve but consider that the dollar makes up around 60% of world trade. The Feds actions affect the world on M3 supply alone. If a poor third world family can only afford two dollars a day then this sort of money injection means that three dollars is needed to survive. Wars are then almost required to keep things going. (Sounds horrible that). As for gov making out it’s our ‘fault’ err no way their covid actions as you stated was completely reckless

     
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    BoE rising interest rates don’t control inflation but is the main driver how many times have they tried that.
    It certainly will put the brakes on but 2 let interest only loans who had a great run since BoE abolished savers and totally tax efficient unlike the Repayment loans that I had, now coupled with Section 24 for more recent landlords the game is up, move over the Modular Flats in the sky are coming for the Corporate, Institutions, Insurance Co’s. Pension Funds & Banks etc.
    Forget about your Houses with garden’s you won’t be having them, EPC will remove many of those but owner occupiers will be delighted to have them and unaffected by the legalisation apparently, it’s only landlords emissions are harmful.

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