Wednesday 22 January 2014

What does the UK unemployment rate mean for monetary policy?



UK data delivered another surprise and according to the Office for National Statistics, the unemployment rate has dropped further to 7.1% from 7.4% bringing the 7% threshold given in forward guidance into question. With the unemployment rate now marginally above the benchmark, the need for the Bank of England to reassess the direction of interest rates is nearing.

Despite the labour market improving significantly faster than expected, the latest MPC meeting minutes suggest a rate increase is still unlikely to occur in the near future. The central bank sees no immediate need to raise interest rates, and with the inflation rate now on target there is even more room to maintain loose monetary policy. Of course the surprise drop in the unemployment will encourage the central bank to reconsider their view on the future for monetary policy, but the BoE will be cautious not raise rates prematurely.

This suggests that a re-evaluation of policy will rather result in an alteration in the central bank’s forward guidance, possibly a reduction in the unemployment benchmark to 6.5%, when the next quarterly Inflation Report is released on Feb 12. The market seems more excited about the fact that this unexpected result has brought the BoE closer to at least considering tightening policy, even if execution is not for a while yet. For now, this has been enough to keep demand for sterling rife.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst