12 resultsfor “Bank of England interest rate decision”
Bank of England's next interest rate decision on Thursday. Economists widely expect the Bank
interest rate rises Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey says the UK's central bank will not rush to make a decision
Bank of England will examine Tuesday’s employment market data and the inflation figures before making their next interest rate decision
decisions](https://www.theguardian.com/business/2026/apr/23/uk-braces-for-price-rises-driven-by-iran-war-as-economic-confidence-plummets). Moreover, the widespread price rises will further pressure the [Bank of England](https://www.theguardian.com/business/bankofenglandgovernor) to raise interest rates
Interest rates are expected to be held at 3.75% by the Bank of England, with uncertainty dominating the UK and global economies. Analysts are widely predicting the benchmark rate will be left unchanged owing
England](https://www.theguardian.com/business/bankofenglandgovernor) has left UK interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, despite signs that inflation is beginning to accelerate due to the impact of the Iran war. The Bank’s rate-setting monetary policy
interest rate rise is going to force an oil tanker through the Strait of Hormuz, or clear the "hazardous area" of mines. The Bank of England repeatedly made the point in its latest meeting
decision, for clues on his views on the likely path for US inflation and the economy more widely. Inflation in the world’s largest economy has jumped from 2.4% in February to a three-year
decisions," it added. The upgrade comes after figures released last week showed the economy grew by 0.6% in the first three months of the year, led by a rebound in areas such as retailing
England began cutting rates in August 2024. Six cuts since then brought rates down to 3.75%, the lowest level since early 2023. The [most recent cut in December 2025](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cj01v7z73q1o) reflected concerns over
decisions taken in the Budget last year had "kept inflation down as we deal with global instability". "We have already taken £117 off energy bills, frozen rail fares, and lifted the two-child limit
decision to go to war. It was the Chancellor Rachel Reeves who was especially vocal on the "folly" and "mistake" of war "which is not ours". The meetings of finance ministers such