Bank of England's Bailey Says 'not Going to Rush' Judgements on Rate Rises, BBC Reports
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 16, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 16, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 16, 2026
2 min readLast updated: April 16, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleBoE Governor Andrew Bailey told BBC on April 16 that the Bank won’t rush rate‑rise judgments amid energy‑price shocks from the Iran war. He emphasized uncertainty while the IMF has downgraded UK growth most among G7 economies. ECB policymaker echoed caution.
LONDON, April 16 (Reuters) - The Bank of England was "not going to rush to judgements" on interest rate rises, Governor Andrew Bailey told BBC News, as global central banks contend with an energy price shock driven by the Iran war.
Bailey, in Washington for the International Monetary Fund's spring meetings, said higher oil and gas prices would certainly feed through to prices, but that other factors made a decision on rates "very, very difficult", according to the report.
"There's really difficult judgements to be made," Bailey said. "We're not going to rush to judgements on those things, because there are a lot of uncertainties around this, not just how it's going to play out, but also how it's going to pass through into the UK economy."
The IMF on Tuesday cut its growth outlook, citing war-driven energy price spikes and supply disruptions, and said the global economy could be driven to the brink of recession if the war widens and oil stays above $100 per barrel through 2027. Britain suffered the sharpest downgrade among large rich economies.
Echoing Bailey's remarks, European Central Bank policymaker Alexander Demarco said policymakers needed be patient and not rush any decision, while acknowledging that the euro zone economy may be moving towards the ECB's adverse scenario.
The comments from both policymakers underscored a cautious approach to monetary policy due to uncertainty over the economic impact of the energy price shock, and followed the IMF's advice to central banks to signal an objective to "protect price stability, but don't rush".
Bailey said in March - when the central bank held rates - that financial markets were getting ahead of themselves in expecting rate increases following the decision. The bank's next rates decision meeting is on April 30.
(Reporting by Muvija M, editing by Andy Bruce)
Governor Andrew Bailey cited significant uncertainties, such as the energy price shock caused by the Iran war and how it will impact the UK economy.
The energy price shock has led to increased caution among central banks, making monetary policy decisions more complex and uncertain.
The IMF cut its growth outlook for Britain, citing war-driven energy price spikes and supply disruptions, resulting in the sharpest downgrade among wealthy economies.
The Bank of England's next interest rate decision meeting is scheduled for April 30.
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