This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/business/6265765.stm
The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Cost of living 'at 11-year high' | Cost of living 'at 11-year high' |
(about 1 hour later) | |
New inflation figures due to be published are expected to show the cost of living has reached an 11-year high. | New inflation figures due to be published are expected to show the cost of living has reached an 11-year high. |
A week after householders were hit by a another rise in interest rates, some City analysts predict the inflation rate for December will be close to 3%. | |
The target rate is 2% - but if it goes above 3%, the Bank's governor Mervyn King would have to write a letter of explanation to the government. | |
This would be for the first time since the Bank gained independence in 1997. | This would be for the first time since the Bank gained independence in 1997. |
'Upward risk' | 'Upward risk' |
The latest inflation rate - or Consumer Prices Index for December as it is formally called - was known to the Bank of England before it made the decision last Thursday to raise interest rates to 5.25%. | The latest inflation rate - or Consumer Prices Index for December as it is formally called - was known to the Bank of England before it made the decision last Thursday to raise interest rates to 5.25%. |
Inflation reached a 10-year high of 2.7% in November - the seventh consecutive month it was above the 2% target. | Inflation reached a 10-year high of 2.7% in November - the seventh consecutive month it was above the 2% target. |
Early predictions suggested it could nudge up to at least 2.8% in December. | Early predictions suggested it could nudge up to at least 2.8% in December. |
Malcolm Barr, of JP Morgan Chase Bank, is expecting the figure to come in at 3%, along with ING economist, James Knightley. | Malcolm Barr, of JP Morgan Chase Bank, is expecting the figure to come in at 3%, along with ING economist, James Knightley. |
Investec economist, Philip Shaw, who initially, predicted a more modest rise to 2.8% before the base rate increase has since admitted there is an "upward risk" on this figure, possibly to as high as 3.1%. | Investec economist, Philip Shaw, who initially, predicted a more modest rise to 2.8% before the base rate increase has since admitted there is an "upward risk" on this figure, possibly to as high as 3.1%. |
He said: "It is fairly easy to see it going up to 2.9% or 3%, but 3.1% is also possible, although you'd need a huge surge in food prices in particular to get that sort of jump." | He said: "It is fairly easy to see it going up to 2.9% or 3%, but 3.1% is also possible, although you'd need a huge surge in food prices in particular to get that sort of jump." |
If the rate does exceed the 3% mark, Mr King would publish the explanatory open letter to Chancellor Gordon Brown at 1030 GMT. | If the rate does exceed the 3% mark, Mr King would publish the explanatory open letter to Chancellor Gordon Brown at 1030 GMT. |
He would be required to state what action was being taken to move the rate back in line with the 2% goal. | He would be required to state what action was being taken to move the rate back in line with the 2% goal. |
Mr King would also need to predict how long it would take to return inflation to target and explain how the Bank of England was meeting the government's monetary policy objectives. |