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Rates Set to Fall Further as Inflation Drops, BoE's Taylor

LONDON, Jan 14 (Reuters) - Interest rates set by the Bank of England should continue to fall as inflation is likely to settle ​around the central bank's 2% target soon, BoE policymaker ‌Alan Taylor said on Wednesday.

"We can now see inflation at target in mid-2026, rather than having to wait until 2027 as in our previous projection," Taylor said in the text of a speech he was due ‌to give at the National University of Singapore.

"I see ​this as sustainable, given cooling wage growth, and I now therefore expect monetary policy to normalise at neutral sooner rather than later....Interest rates ‍should continue on a downward path, that is if my outlook continues to match up with the data, as it has done over the past year."

Taylor ⁠was part of a five-strong majority on the central bank's Monetary ‍Policy Committee that approved a cut in the BoE's benchmark interest rate to ‌3.75% ‌from 4% in December. The other four MPC members favoured no change to borrowing costs.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey has said inflation - which stood at 3.2% in its most recent reading - could fall to around ⁠2% in April ⁠or May this ​year. Investors are close to pricing two further quarter-point rate cuts by the BoE in 2026.

In his speech on Wednesday, Taylor focused on the outlook for ‍global trade which he expected to recover in the long run from shocks in recent years including U.S. President Donald Trump's import tariffs, helping to reduce ​inflation pressures.

"Smoother international trade is, at the ‍end of the day, a positive supply shock – for those countries who choose to ​participate, at least," he said.

Writing by William Schomberg; Editing by Sarah Young

Source: Reuters


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