Rising inflation is 'no barrier to more quantitative easing'
Annual inflation on the official measure – the Consumer Prices Index – is forecast to rise to 4.5pc in August from 4.4pc in July.
Scottish Power raised both its gas and electricity prices at the beginning of last month, which is expected to feed through to the CPI.
"The ongoing squeeze in households' real incomes is the worst since the mid-1970s and a major source of consumer disgruntlement," said Simon Hayes, economist at Barclays Capital.
The data, to be published by the Office for National Statistics on Tuesday, will not be welcomed by the MPC which has repeatedly failed to meet its 2pc inflation target.
The situation is expected to worsen further in the coming months with inflation nearing 5pc.
Despite rising inflation, Investec expects the MPC to restart QE as soon as October because the risks to growth are so severe. It has already spent £200bn of newly created money on buying assets, mainly Government bonds.
More from the source: Rising inflation is 'no barrier to more quantitative easing' - Telegraph
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AtW's comment: and why not, it's not like keeping inflation under control is a written job requirement for Bank of England?
And another thought - Govt bonds offer very low interest rate, so one would assume there is massive demand for them, however if that was the case why would BoE need to print money to buy them?
The way things go I might be forced to buy a house soon
Annual inflation on the official measure – the Consumer Prices Index – is forecast to rise to 4.5pc in August from 4.4pc in July.
Scottish Power raised both its gas and electricity prices at the beginning of last month, which is expected to feed through to the CPI.
"The ongoing squeeze in households' real incomes is the worst since the mid-1970s and a major source of consumer disgruntlement," said Simon Hayes, economist at Barclays Capital.
The data, to be published by the Office for National Statistics on Tuesday, will not be welcomed by the MPC which has repeatedly failed to meet its 2pc inflation target.
The situation is expected to worsen further in the coming months with inflation nearing 5pc.
Despite rising inflation, Investec expects the MPC to restart QE as soon as October because the risks to growth are so severe. It has already spent £200bn of newly created money on buying assets, mainly Government bonds.
More from the source: Rising inflation is 'no barrier to more quantitative easing' - Telegraph
--
AtW's comment: and why not, it's not like keeping inflation under control is a written job requirement for Bank of England?
And another thought - Govt bonds offer very low interest rate, so one would assume there is massive demand for them, however if that was the case why would BoE need to print money to buy them?
The way things go I might be forced to buy a house soon
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