US Interest Rates Slashed, Will The UK Follow Suit?
23 01 2008As we hear news that US interest rates have been slashed by three quarters of one percent there are high hopes that we may see similar action in the UK. However, will the Bank of England really see the need to take such action? Is the UK economy as bad as the US economy?
While there is no doubt that we will see further ongoing reductions in UK interest rates over the coming weeks and months, it seem very unlikely at this moment in time that we will see such a knee jerk reactions as that seen in the States. Let’s not forget that the credit crunch began in the US and it is the US housing market which is currently bearing the brunt, with record numbers of home owners on the verge of being evicted, personal debt at record levels and unemployment starting to move upwards.
Only this week we have seen massive billion dollar write-offs by some of America’s largest financial companies, many of whom where left with massive losses on bonds and other financial instruments when the sub-prime credit market collapsed. As yet we have not seen such large write-offs in the UK, but that does not mean that the UK financial sector has remained unscathed, more that loses (all be it smaller) have not yet been quantified.
So why is the UK economy potentially different to the US economy?
While there is, and always has been, a close correlation between the UK and US economies they are not currently at the same levels in the boom and bust cycles. Indeed the UK authorities have managed to reduce the often wild swings between the boom and bust cycles, where perhaps the US authorities have not been as successful. This has resulted in a stronger core UK economy although that said there will be a marked downturn in 2008, with many areas of business already seeing reduced demand.
The UK authorities need to strike a balance between pain for the economy and the consumer against a need to keep the rate of inflation under tight control. However, it looks as thought the government’s core target rate of around 2% will be breached within the next 12 months with the Bank of England suggesting that the rate could climb above 3% during this next phase of the economic cycle.
Either way the UK economy is in much better shape than its US counter-part where further over exuberance on behalf of the financial sector and the consumer has led us into the current situation. The UK consumer has long been a little more reserved that the US consumer, but there is still no doubt that 2008 will be a difficult period all round.












